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Dual colonization of the Palaearctic from different regions in the Afrotropics by Senecio
Author(s) -
Kandziora Martha,
Kadereit Joachim W.,
Gehrke Berit
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1365-2699
pISSN - 0305-0270
DOI - 10.1111/jbi.12837
Subject(s) - senecio , colonization , ecology , biology , lineage (genetic) , aridification , biogeography , western palaearctic , phylogeography , arid , geography , phylogenetic tree , taxonomy (biology) , biochemistry , gene
Aim Investigation of the geographical origin of Senecio and the colonization of the Palaearctic including the relationship of life‐history strategy and elevational distribution in the source area and the colonized area. Location Worldwide with a focus on the Afrotropic and the Palaearctic. Methods Sampling focused on adding species from the Afrotropic to existing datasets of Senecio . Two nuclear markers and three chloroplast markers were amplified and sequenced. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference were used to infer phylogeny, divergence times, biogeographical history and life‐history strategy evolution. Results Senecio originated most likely during the Mid to Late Miocene in western southern Africa ( WSA ). Colonization of the Palaearctic probably started from two different areas. One lineage of mostly annual lowland species seems to have originated in WSA , whereas the other lineage of perennial mountain species originated in mountainous areas of eastern southern Africa or tropical/subtropical East Africa. Main conclusions Senecio evolved in arid or semi‐arid regions in WSA during a period of ongoing aridification and broad‐scale biome changes at the onset of a winter rainfall regime in the Greater Cape Floristic Region. Life‐history strategy and elevational distribution of the two Palaearctic lineages did not change between the source areas and the colonized areas.

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