INVESTIGADORES
ACOSTA Juan Manuel
artículos
Título:
Evolutionary patterns within the New World Clade Polygala sections Clinclinia and Monninopsis (Polygalaceae)
Autor/es:
MARTINEZ, AGUSTINA; ACOSTA, JUAN MANUEL; FERRERO, MARIA A.; PASTORE, FLORIANO BARÊA; AAGESEN, LONE
Revista:
PERSPECTIVES IN PLANT ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER GMBH
Referencias:
Año: 2022 vol. 55
ISSN:
1433-8319
Resumen:
Members of Polygala sections Clinclinia and Monninopsis, from the New World Clade (NWC), inhabit arid to humidhabitats along the American continent. Although knowledge of these sections is currently incomplete, it is crucialfor understanding evolutionary and diversification patterns in Polygalaceae. Here, we sample new species fromthe Polygala NWC with emphasis on these two sections, providing a comprehensive molecular phylogeny basedon DNA sequence data from one nuclear (ITS) and three chloroplast (trnL-F intergenic spacer, rbcL, and partialmatK-trnK) loci. Furthermore, we conducted comparisons for the main clades in the environmental andgeographic spaces using climatic and elevation data processed by ordination and species distribution modelling(SDM) techniques. In addition, an ancestral state reconstruction for the morphological flower traits "violet spotson lateral petals" and "style shape" was carried out. The ancestral flower of the Polygala NWC was reconstructedas not having violet spots on the lateral petals and with a style with superior appendages. Within Polygala sect.Monninopsis, we found three distinct lineages. The North American clade A1 showed a potential distributionfound along the Andes, from southern United States to Argentina. The South American P. argentinensis waspredicted to be found from central Mexico to Argentina. The Patagonian P. darwiniana was also predicted to befound in northern North America and in the Lower California Peninsula in Mexico. Within Polygala sect. Clin­clinia, we also found three distinct lineages. Clade B1 in addition to its empirical distribution found in Chile andArgentina, also showed a potential distribution found in Colombia. Clade B2 in addition to its empirical dis­tribution found in north and central Argentina, southern Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, and southern Brazil, alsoshowed a potential distribution in southern Chile, southern Argentina, and the South Atlantic Islands. Finally, theArgentinian clade B3 was also predicted to be found in central Chile and southern Bolivia. An updated synonymiclist of the Polygala sects. Clinclinia and Monninopsis as treated in this study is also provided.