Molecular phylogeny and biogeography of Linanthus (Polemoniaceae)
Author(s) -
Bell Charles D.,
Patterson Robert W.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.2307/2656838
Subject(s) - biology , molecular clock , evolutionary biology , genus , endemism , biogeography , phylogenetics , divergence (linguistics) , molecular phylogenetics , phylogenetic tree , ecology , gene , genetics , linguistics , philosophy
To better understand the evolutionary history of Linanthus (Polemoniaceae) and its relatives, molecular phylogenies based on DNA sequence data from the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of nrDNA and the chloroplast gene matK were estimated using several methods. Our data suggest two separate and well‐supported lineages of Linanthus in close association with two other genera— Leptodactylon and Phlox. These results agree with previous molecular systematic work on the Polemoniaceae, but do not support the traditional classification of the genus as a natural group, nor do they support the sectional classification within the genus. With a distribution centered primarily in western North America and a high degree of endemism in the California Floristic Province, it has been suggested by Raven and Axelrod that the origin and diversification of Linanthus and its relatives were tied to the development of a summer‐dry climate in western North America, which began around 13–15 million years ago (mya). Increased drying during the Pliocene (1.2–5 mya) has also been hypothesized by Axelrod to have led to an increase in plant speciation in California and adjacent areas. Divergence times within the Linanthus lineages were estimated from the ITS and matK gene trees. A log‐likelihood ratio test could not reject clock‐like evolution for the matK data; however, the clock was strongly rejected for the ITS data set. Although ITS molecular evolution was not clock‐like, the estimated times of divergence were similar to those of the matK data set. Within both lineages of Linanthus there seems to have been considerable diversification that has occurred since the Pliocene.