4.5 Article

Unraveling the biogeographical history of Chrysobalanaceae from plastid genomes

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 103, Issue 6, Pages 1089-1102

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1500463

Keywords

biogeography; Chrysobalanaceae; diversification; phylogeny; plastid genomes

Categories

Funding

  1. ANR [ANR-10-LABX-25-01, ANR-10-LABX-0041]
  2. Fondation pour la Recherche sur la Biodiversite grant (Atrophy)

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PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The complex geological and climatic history of the Neotropics has had major implications on the diversification of plant lineages. Chrysobalanaceae is a pantropical family of trees and shrubs with 75% of its 531 species found in the Neotropics, and a time-calibrated phylogeny of this family should shed light on the tempo of diversification in the Neotropical flora. Previously published phylogenetic hypotheses of this family were poorly supported, and its biogeography remains unclear. METHODS: We assembled the complete plastid genome of 51 Chrysobalanaceae species, and increased taxon sampling by Sanger-sequencing of five plastid regions for an additional 88 species. We generated a time-calibrated tree including all 139 Chrsyobalanaceae species and 23 outgroups. We then conducted an ancestral area reconstruction analysis and estimated diversifi cation rates in the family. KEY RESULTS: The tree generated with the plastid genome alignment was almost fully resolved. It supports the polyphyly of Licania and Hirtella. The family has diversified starting around the Eocene-Oligocene transition. An ancestral area reconstruction confirms a Paleotropical origin for Chrysobalanaceae with several transoceanic dispersal events. The main Neotropical clade likely resulted from a single migration event from Africa around 28 mya ago, which subsequently underwent rapid diversifi cation. CONCLUSIONS: Given the diverse ecologies exhibited by extant species, we hypothesize that the rapid diversifi cation of Chrysobalanaceae following the colonization of the Neotropics was triggered by habitat specialization during the complex geological and paleoclimatic history of the Neotropics.

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