Journal
SYSTEMATIC BOTANY
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 593-600Publisher
AMER SOC PLANT TAXONOMISTS
DOI: 10.1600/036364410792495827
Keywords
Hydrangeaceae; Hydrangeeae; Hydrangea; Phylogeny; infrageneric classification; chloroplast regions
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Funding
- Stichting Arboretum, Wespelaar, Belgium
- Ghent University [01J03309]
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Several representatives of Hydrangeaceae tribe Hydrangeeae are popular in the horticultural trade for their inflorescences with attractive marginal flowers, resulting in many hybrids and cultivars However, despite previous morphological and molecular studies, the phylogenetic relationships between the nine currently recognized genera in this clade are still largely unclear, and the widely used infrageneric classification of the genus Hydrangea by McClintock (which was mainly based on the study of herbarium specimens) requires critical reevaluation We present a partially well resolved and well supported phylogeny of the tribe Hydrangeeae based on maximum parsimony and Bayesian analyses of multiple coding and noncoding chloroplast regions (rps16-trnK spacer, trnK intron, trnK exon, nun K gene and trnK-psbA spacer) All genera, sections and subsections were included making it a representative sampling for the tribe Hydrangeeae Hydrangea is paraphyletic with respect to the eight other genera of Hydrangeeae, requiring a classification update The subsections Heteromallae and Petalanthe of section Hydrangea are monophyletic, the subsections Americanae, Asperae and Macrophyllae are paraphyletic Of the two subsections of section Cornulia, one, Polysegia, is monophyletic whereas the other, Monosegia, is paraphylenc The necessary nomenclatural changes based on these results might have a certain effect in the trade but also might encourage breeders to produce intergeneric hybrids between traditionally recognized genera in Hydrangeeae
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