4.0 Article

Biogeographic Patterns of Diversification and the Origins of C4 in Cleome (Cleomaceae)

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BOTANY
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 811-826

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT TAXONOMISTS
DOI: 10.1600/036364410X539880

Keywords

ancestral state reconstruction; C-4 photosynthesis; Cleomaceae; historical biogeography; ITS; molecular phylogeny

Funding

  1. Civilian Research and Development Foundation [RUB1-2829-ST-06]

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Photosynthetic pathway innovations have had a large impact on patterns of diversification of angiosperm lineages and the biogeographic distribution of ecological assemblages. C-4 photosynthesis has been one of the most studied processes in plants with respect to function, structure, occurrence, and response to climatic conditions. One of the most promising areas of research of C-4 photosynthesis is in the Cleomaceae. Here we explore the phylogenetic origins of the C-4 pathway in the Cleomaceae using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference analyses of nrDNA ITS sequences. As has been found previously, commonly recognized genera including Bultsia, Cleomella, Dactylaena, Gynandropsis, Isomeris, Oxystylis, Podandrogyne, Polanisia, and Wizlizenia are derived from within a paraphyletic Cleome. The phylogenetic results presented here indicate that there are likely at least five separate origins of carbon concentrating mechanisms in the Cleomaceae, including at least three separate origins of C-4 species. Analyses of historical biogeography suggest Cleomaceae originated in central Asia.

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