INVESTIGADORES
AMARILLA Leonardo David
artículos
Título:
A tale of North and South America: Time and mode of dispersal of the amphitropical genus Munroa (Poaceae, Chloridoideae)
Autor/es:
LEONARDO D. AMARILLA ; CHIAPELLA J.O.; V. SOSA; MORENO NATALIA; ANA M. ANTON
Revista:
BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2015 vol. 179
ISSN:
0024-4074
Resumen:
Plant disjunctions have provided some of the most intriguing distribution patterns historically addressed by biogeographers. We evaluated the three hypotheses that have been postulated to explain these patterns -vicariance, stepping-stone dispersal and long-distance dispersal (LDD) using Munroa, an American genus of grasses with six species and disjunct distribution between the desert regions of North and South America. Ages of clades, cytology, and ancestral characters and areas of distribution were investigated in order to establish relationships among species, determine the time of divergence of the genus and its main lineages, and further understand the biogeographic and evolutionary history of this genus. Bayesian inference recovered the North American M. pulchella as sister species to the rest. Molecular dating and ancestral area analyses suggests that Munroa originated in North America in the late Miocene-Pliocene (7.2; 8.2?6.5 Mya). Based on these results we postulate that two dispersal events modeled the current distribution patterns of Munroa; the first from North to South America (7.2; 8.2?6.5 Mya ago) and the second (1.8; 2?0.8 Mya ago) from South to North America. Arid conditions of the late Miocene-Pliocene in the Neogene and Quaternary climatic oscillations in North America and South America were probably advantageous for establishment of populations of Munroa. We did not find any relationship between ploidy level and dispersal events and our ancestral character analyses suggest that shifts associated with dispersal and seedling establishment ?such as habit, reproductive system, disarticulation of rachilla and shape and texture of the glume? have been important to these species reaching new areas.