4.7 Article

Phylogeny and Biogeography of Morus (Moraceae)

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13082021

Keywords

ancestral area reconstruction; biogeography; dispersal; divergence times; Morus; phylogeny

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This study used newly generated and previously published Hyb-Seq data to reconstruct the phylogeny of the mulberry genus and explore its biogeographic history. The results showed the evolutionary relationships and origin time of the genus, providing important insights into understanding species relationships and the evolutionary history of Morus.
The mulberry genus, Morus L. (Moraceae), has long been taxonomically difficult, and its species circumscription has only been defined recently. This genus comprises ca. 16 species distributed across Asia and the Americas, yet its biogeographic history remains poorly understood. In this study, we reconstructed the phylogeny and explored the biogeographic history of Morus using a combination of newly generated and previously published Hyb-Seq data. Our nuclear phylogeny recovered three well-supported geographic clades of Morus and showed that M. notabilis (China) is sister to the American clade plus the Asian clade. Multiple reticulation events among species of Morus and extensive incomplete lineage sorting (ILS) likely explain the difficulties in inferring phylogenetic relationships within the genus. Divergence time estimation indicated that Morus originated at the Eocene-Oligocene boundary, and current lineages started to diverge during the early Miocene, there is ambiguity surrounding the ancestral area with the two most likely regions being Sino-Himalaya or the Americas. Biogeographic inference and the fossil record suggest that Morus might have experienced extensive local extinction events during the Tertiary. Morus has expanded its distributional range through two dispersals from the Sino-Himalayan and Sino-Japanese regions to Southeast Asia. In summary, our new phylogenetic scheme and the biogeographic history presented here provide an essential foundation for understanding species relationships and the evolutionary history of Morus.

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