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Phylogeography above the species level for perennial species in a composite genus
Author(s) -
Karin Tremetsberger,
María Ángeles Ortiz Herrera,
Anass Terrab,
Francisco Balao,
Ramón C. Soriguer,
María Talavera,
Salvador Talavera
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
aob plants
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.998
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2041-2851
DOI - 10.1093/aobpla/plv142
Subject(s) - phylogeography , biology , subspecies , amplified fragment length polymorphism , evolutionary biology , lineage (genetic) , range (aeronautics) , population , molecular phylogenetics , biogeography , taxon , ecology , phylogenetic tree , genetic diversity , biochemistry , materials science , demography , sociology , gene , composite material
In phylogeography, DNA sequence and fingerprint data at the population level are used to infer evolutionary histories of species. Phylogeography above the species level is concerned with the genealogical aspects of divergent lineages. Here, we present a phylogeographic study to examine the evolutionary history of a western Mediterranean composite, focusing on the perennial species of Helminthotheca (Asteraceae, Cichorieae). We used molecular markers (amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP), internal transcribed spacer and plastid DNA sequences) to infer relationships among populations throughout the distributional range of the group. Interpretation is aided by biogeographic and molecular clock analyses. Four coherent entities are revealed by Bayesian mixture clustering of AFLP data, which correspond to taxa previously recognized at the rank of subspecies. The origin of the group was in western North Africa, from where it expanded across the Strait of Gibraltar to the Iberian Peninsula and across the Strait of Sicily to Sicily. Pleistocene lineage divergence is inferred within western North Africa as well as within the western Iberian region. The existence of the four entities as discrete evolutionary lineages suggests that they should be elevated to the rank of species, yielding H. aculeata, H. comosa, H. maroccana and H. spinosa, whereby the latter two necessitate new combinations.

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