Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Freitas C., Meerow A. W., Pintaud Jean-Christophe, Henderson A., Noblick L., Costa F. R. C., Barbosa C. E., Barrington D. (2016). Phylogenetic analysis of Attalea (Arecaceae) : insights into the historical biogeography of a recently diversified Neotropical plant group. In : Balslev H. (ed.), Bernal R. (ed.), Fay M.F. (ed.). Palms : emblems of tropical forests. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 182 (2 (no spécial)), p. 287-302. ISSN 0024-4074.

Titre du document
Phylogenetic analysis of Attalea (Arecaceae) : insights into the historical biogeography of a recently diversified Neotropical plant group
Année de publication
2016
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000385748500008
Auteurs
Freitas C., Meerow A. W., Pintaud Jean-Christophe, Henderson A., Noblick L., Costa F. R. C., Barbosa C. E., Barrington D.
In
Balslev H. (ed.), Bernal R. (ed.), Fay M.F. (ed.), Palms : emblems of tropical forests
Source
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2016, 182 (2 (no spécial)), p. 287-302 ISSN 0024-4074
We present a dated phylogenetic tree for the Neotropical genus Attalea (Arecaceae). We used six orthologues from the nuclear WRKY gene family across 98 accessions to address relationships among species and biogeographical hypotheses. We found that the formerly recognized groups within Attalea are not monophyletic and therefore there is no support for multiple genera as previously thought. Species of Attalea-like palms from the Atlantic forest form a well-supported clade sister to the Attalea species from Amazonia, the Andean valleys and Mesoamerica. Dates for the main divergence events suggest a relationship with the development of the dry forests that now span eastern South America and the now-lost Pebas Lake region in the western Amazon. Attalea crassispatha possibly colonized Hispaniola by a long-distance dispersal event, not via the land bridge Great Antilles Avian Ridge (GAAR), before the Panama channel closed. The common ancestor of Attalea appears to have been an Atlantic forest clade c. 30 Mya. The early split between the Atlantic-forest clade and the two Amazonian-northern Andean clades was probably the result of climatic changes that caused an increase in aridity in South America.
Plan de classement
Sciences du monde végétal [076] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Description Géographique
BRESIL ; AMAZONIE ; ZONE ARIDE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010068247]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010068247
Contact