Literature DB >> 17161629

Systematics and morphological evolution within the moss family Bryaceae: a comparison between parsimony and Bayesian methods for reconstruction of ancestral character states.

Niklas Pedersen1, David T Holyoak, Angela E Newton.   

Abstract

The Bryaceae are a large cosmopolitan moss family including genera of significant morphological and taxonomic complexity. Phylogenetic relationships within the Bryaceae were reconstructed based on DNA sequence data from all three genomic compartments. In addition, maximum parsimony and Bayesian inference were employed to reconstruct ancestral character states of 38 morphological plus four habitat characters and eight insertion/deletion events. The recovered phylogenetic patterns are generally in accord with previous phylogenies based on chloroplast DNA sequence data and three major clades are identified. The first clade comprises Bryum bornholmense, B. rubens, B. caespiticium, and Plagiobryum. This corroborates the hypothesis suggested by previous studies that several Bryum species are more closely related to Plagiobryum than to the core Bryum species. The second clade includes Acidodontium, Anomobryum, and Haplodontium, while the third clade contains the core Bryum species plus Imbribryum. Within the latter clade, B. subapiculatum and B. tenuisetum form the sister clade to Imbribryum. Reconstructions of ancestral character states under maximum parsimony and Bayesian inference suggest fourteen morphological synapomorphies for the ingroup and synapomorphies are detected for most clades within the ingroup. Maximum parsimony and Bayesian reconstructions of ancestral character states are mostly congruent although Bayesian inference shows that the posterior probability of ancestral character states may decrease dramatically when node support is taken into account. Bayesian inference also indicates that reconstructions may be ambiguous at internal nodes for highly polymorphic characters.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17161629     DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2006.10.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol        ISSN: 1055-7903            Impact factor:   4.286


  2 in total

1.  The resurrection of Neohattoria Kamim. (Jubulaceae, Marchantiophyta): a six decade systematic conflict resolved through a molecular perspective.

Authors:  Juan Larraín; Benjamin Carter; Blanka Shaw; Jörn Hentschel; Lynika S Strozier; Tatsuwo Furuki; Jochen Heinrichs; Barbara Crandall-Stotler; John Engel; Matt von Konrat
Journal:  PhytoKeys       Date:  2015-06-16       Impact factor: 1.635

2.  Reconstructing the ups and downs of primate brain evolution: implications for adaptive hypotheses and Homo floresiensis.

Authors:  Stephen H Montgomery; Isabella Capellini; Robert A Barton; Nicholas I Mundy
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2010-01-27       Impact factor: 7.431

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.