| Literature DB >> 29800652 |
Ke-Wang Xu1, Xin-Mao Zhou2, Qian-Yi Yin3, Liang Zhang4, Ngan Thi Lu5, Ralf Knapp6, Thien Tam Luong7, Hai He8, Qiang Fan3, Wan-Yi Zhao3, Xin-Fen Gao9, Wen-Bo Liao10, Li-Bing Zhang11.
Abstract
The fern genus Hymenasplenium (Aspleniaceae) is one of the two genera in the family. It is generally recognized among modern pteridologists. However, its infrageneric relationships and species diversity have been unclear and controversial. The molecular studies so far have had small taxon and character sampling. In the present study, DNA sequences of six plastid markers of 158 accessions representing ca. 40 out of ca. 50 known species of Hymenasplenium, and 16 species of Asplenium were used to infer a phylogeny with maximum likelihood, Bayesian inference, and maximum parsimony approaches. Our major results include: (1) Hymenasplenium as currently defined is strongly supported as monophyletic; (2) three major clades representing early splits in Hymenasplenium are identified, with the Old World species being strongly supported as monophyletic; it is ambiguous if the New World species are monophyletic; (3) extensive cryptic speciation in the Old World is discovered demonstrating the complexity of evolution of the genus; and (4) six strongly or moderately supported subclades in the Old World clade are revealed, differing from one another in molecular, morphological, and geographical features.Entities:
Keywords: Asplenium; Cryptic species; Eupolypods II; Fern phylogeny; Pantropical distribution
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29800652 DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.05.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Phylogenet Evol ISSN: 1055-7903 Impact factor: 4.286