4.5 Article

Phylogenetic Relationships in the Group Caespitosa of Paspalum L. (Poaceae, Panicoideae, Paspaleae)

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d15020134

Keywords

Gramineae; informal groups; Paspalinae; systematics; taxonomy

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By analyzing four DNA regions and increasing the sample size, this study found that Caespitosa species are distributed in seven morphologically distinct clades, which are correlated with other informal groups. It also discovered that one clade is associated with geographic isolation. The study also discusses the comparison with other studies, the polyphyly of the Macrophylla group, and the need for future molecular studies in Paspalum.
The informal group Caespitosa of Paspalum L. comprises 13-15 perennial species that are able to tolerate extreme climatic stresses, such as prolonged droughts, floods, and saltwater. Previous molecular phylogenetic studies have suggested that the Caespitosa might not be monophyletic, but they did not analyze a large enough sample of taxa for a meaningful conclusion. In this study, we evaluate the phylogeny of the genus Paspalum using parsimony, likelihood, and Bayesian inference based on four DNA regions (ETS, ndhF, rpl16, and trnH-psbA) and increasing the number of sampled species (i.e., a total of 13 taxa and 40 new accessions of the group Caespitosa). Our main objective was to analyze the positions of Caespitosa taxa, assuming a priori that they do not represent a natural group as traditionally circumscribed. Our findings showed the Caespitosa species distributed in seven morphologically distinct clades and correlated with members of the informal groups Alma, Corcovadensia, Dissecta, Lachnea, Macrophylla, Notata, Paniculata, and Rupestria. Clades containing Caespitosa taxa were characterized based on morphological, anatomical, and cytological evidence, one of which was associated with geographic isolation. A comparison with results from other studies, a brief discussion on the group Macrophylla, which our analyses showed to be polyphyletic, and comments on the need for future molecular studies in Paspalum are also included.

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