| Literature DB >> 19087283 |
Thomas L P Couvreur1, Lars W Chatrou, Marc S M Sosef, James E Richardson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How this diversity evolved remains largely unexplained. In Africa, rain forests are situated in two geographically isolated regions: the West-Central Guineo-Congolian region and the coastal and montane regions of East Africa. These regions have strong floristic affinities with each other, suggesting a former connection via an Eocene pan-African rain forest. High levels of endemism observed in both regions have been hypothesized to be the result of either 1) a single break-up followed by a long isolation or 2) multiple fragmentation and reconnection since the Oligocene. To test these hypotheses the evolutionary history of endemic taxa within a rain forest restricted African lineage of the plant family Annonaceae was studied. Molecular phylogenies and divergence dates were estimated using a Bayesian relaxed uncorrelated molecular clock assumption accounting for both calibration and phylogenetic uncertainties.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19087283 PMCID: PMC2628871 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7007-6-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Figure 1Alternative hypotheses of African rain forest origins. (A) Distribution of lowland rain forest in Africa (black) overlaid by altitudinal range (increasing altitude with darker grey). Red lines highlight the Guineo-Congolian region; the blue line highlights the East African region. (B) Phylogenetic tree expected from a single break-up scenario. (C) Phylogenetic tree expected from multiple break-ups at significantly different times scenario. Open circles indicate West-Central/East splits.
Mean and 95% of the highest posterior distributions (HPD) of the coefficient of variation and covariance parameters for dataset A (genus-level phylogeny) and B (species-level phylogeny)
| Coefficient of variation | Covariance | |
| 95% HPD lower | 0.45 | -0.101 |
| 95% HPD upper | 0.602 | 0.238 |
| 95% HPD lower | 0.521 | -0.254 |
| 95% HPD upper | 1.012 | 0.186 |
Figure 2Estimated divergence times within African Annonaceae. Maximum clade credibility chronograms, with nodes represented by their mean ages estimated under a relaxed lognormal uncorrelated molecular clock assumption. East African endemic taxa are indicated in blue, West and Central African taxa in red, taxa endemic to Madagascar in black. Solid circles indicate nodes used for calibration of the trees. Open circles indicate nodes for which divergence dates were estimated. Thick branches lead to nodes with more than 0.95 posterior probability support. Geological Epochs, shaded bars: Paleo., Paleocene; Oligo., Oligocene; Pli., Pliocene; Pleis., Pleistocene. (A) Genus-level chronogram showing phylogenetic relationships within the African clade. (B) Species-level chronogram of the two sister genera Isolona and Monodora. (C) posterior distributions of the estimated ages. The 95% highest posterior density (HPD) intervals are indicated with black bars and given between brackets after the mean. These distributions were used to accept or reject significant congruence of node ages.