4.1 Article

Colonization of the Southern Hemisphere by Sagina and Colobanthus (Caryophyllaceae)

Journal

PLANT SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 308, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00606-021-01793-w

Keywords

Amphitropical; Biogeography; Bipolar; Long-distance dispersal; Stepping-stone migration

Funding

  1. NERC-CONICYT Grant [NE/P003079/1]
  2. Carlsberg Foundation [CF18-0267]
  3. NERC [NE/P003079/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Colobanthus (23 species) and Sagina (30-33 species) are confirmed as monophyletic sister genera. Sagina likely originated in Australasia or Africa, while Colobanthus likely originated in America.
Colobanthus (23 species) and Sagina (30-33 species) together are sister to Facchinia. Whereas Facchinia is distributed in western Eurasia, Colobanthus is almost exclusively distributed in the Southern Hemisphere, and Sagina is distributed in both hemispheres with the highest species diversity in western Eurasia. We examined: 1. Whether Sagina and Colobanthus are monophyletic sister genera, 2. Where the two genera originated and how many times dispersal between hemispheres occurred, and 3. Which colonization routes between hemispheres were taken. We reconstructed the phylogeny of Colobanthus and Sagina using nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and two plastid spacers (cpDNA) of altogether 158 ingroup samples of 45 species, and performed molecular dating and ancestral area reconstructions. Sagina and Colobanthus were confirmed as monophyletic sister genera. Biogeographical reconstructions based on ITS and cpDNA showed that Sagina reached the Southern Hemisphere in Australasia or in Africa. For Colobanthus, patterns were less clear and less well-supported: ITS showed Australasia as the region of entry, but cpDNA implied that the Southern Hemisphere may have been entered in America. The extant distributions and the biogeographical histories of Colobanthus and Sagina show both similarities and dissimilarities. This illustrates that biogeographical histories, even of closely related and ecologically very similar lineages, can be highly idiosyncratic.

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