Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Swenson U., Munzinger Jérôme, Lowry P.P., Cronholm B., Nylinder S. (2015). Island life - classification, speciation and cryptic species of Pycnandra (Sapotaceae) in New Caledonia. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 179 (1), p. 57-77. ISSN 0024-4074.

Titre du document
Island life - classification, speciation and cryptic species of Pycnandra (Sapotaceae) in New Caledonia
Année de publication
2015
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000359361900003
Auteurs
Swenson U., Munzinger Jérôme, Lowry P.P., Cronholm B., Nylinder S.
Source
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2015, 179 (1), p. 57-77 ISSN 0024-4074
Pycnandra (Sapotaceae), the largest endemic genus in New Caledonia, comprises 66 species classified in six subgenera. We tested phylogenetic relationships and a proposed infrageneric classification by sampling 60 species for sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA (ETS, ITS, RPB2) and plastid DNA (trnH-psbA) and nine morphological characters. Data were analysed with Bayesian inference, parsimony jackknifing and lineage through time. We recovered a phylogenetic tree supporting the recognition of six proposed subgenera (Achradotypus, Leptostylis, Pycnandra, Sebertia, Trouettia and Wagapensia). Because a subgeneric classification is used, the nomenclature will be stable when the members are transferred to Pycnandra. Morphological traits were optimized in the BEAST analysis, adding evidence to earlier work that morphology has limited value for successfully diagnosing groups in Sapotaceae. We confirm a previously suspected case of cryptic species that exhibit the same morphological features and require the same abiotic conditions, but are distantly related in the phylogenetic tree. We detected two possible new cases of cryptic sibling species that might warrant recognition. A slowdown in speciation rate in several genera has been suggested as evidence that New Caledonia was once submerged after rifting from Australia. Plotting lineages through time reveals two important intervals at 7.5-8.6Ma and present to 1.5Ma, when net molecular diversification within the genus was zero. This indicates that the genus presently has reached a dynamic equilibrium, providing additional evidence that New Caledonia is an old Darwinian island, being submerged during the Eocene and colonized after re-emergence c. 37Ma.
Plan de classement
Evolution [076BOTA02]
Descripteurs
ARBRE FORESTIER ; PHYLOGENIE ; MORPHOLOGIE ; CLASSIFICATION ; MILIEU INSULAIRE
Description Géographique
NOUVELLE CALEDONIE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010065228]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010065228
Contact