Premium
Is the southern South American genus Tweedia (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) monophyletic? Molecular phylogenies, distribution and taxonomy
Author(s) -
Calviño Carolina I.,
Fernandez Martina,
Ezcurra Cecilia
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
taxon
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.819
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1996-8175
pISSN - 0040-0262
DOI - 10.12705/636.35
Subject(s) - monophyly , clade , biology , apocynaceae , maximum parsimony , genus , taxonomy (biology) , cladistics , zoology , evolutionary biology , phylogenetic tree , botany , biochemistry , gene
Tweedia is a genus traditionally regarded as composed of seven species distributed on both sides of the Andes in southern South America. Recent molecular analyses of two of its species have shown that they are found in different lineages within the MOOG clade of Apocynaceae subfam. Asclepiadoideae, which questions its monophyly and generic affinities. Whereas Tweedia australis falls within the Diplolepis clade of MOOG, T. brunonis appears within tribe Oxypetalinae. This work provides a molecular phylogeny of all species of Tweedia including its type, T. birostrata , to test the monophyly of the group and assess its relationships with Diplolepis and other genera of the MOOG clade. Phylogenetic analyses of cpDNA trnT‐trnF and rps16 regions of 68 accessions of Apocynaceae using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference methods show that Tweedia species form a well‐supported monophyletic group that is morphologically distinct, allied to Araujia and Philibertia of the Oxypetalinae. The study also supports the recent transfer of the former T. australis to Diplolepis as D. australis . Within Tweedia , two clades divided by the Andes can be recognized, one from the west (central Chile) and one from the east (western Argentina). The geographical and environmental characteristics of the genus and of these two groups are discussed in an evolutionary context.