4.6 Article

Distinct Processes Drive Diversification in Different Clades of Gesneriaceae

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 4, Pages 662-684

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syw012

Keywords

Diversification rates; epiphytism; Gesneriaceae; historical biogeography; Lamiales; pollination syndrome

Funding

  1. School of Biological Sciences at Washington State University
  2. College of Arts and Sciences at Washington State University

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Using a time-calibrated phylogenetic hypothesis including 768 Gesneriaceae species (out of 3300 species) and more than 29,000 aligned bases from 26 gene regions, we test Gesneriaceae for diversification rate shifts and the possible proximal drivers of these shifts: geographic distributions, growth forms, and pollination syndromes. Bayesian Analysis of Macroevolutionary Mixtures analyses found five significant rate shifts in Beslerieae, core Nematanthus, core Columneinae, core Streptocarpus, and Pacific Cyrtandra. These rate shifts correspond with shifts in diversification rates, as inferred by Binary State Speciation and Extinction Model and Geographic State Speciation and Extinction model, associated with hummingbird pollination, epiphytism, unifoliate growth, and geographic area. Our results suggest that diversification processes are extremely variable across Gesneriaceae clades with different combinations of characters influencing diversification rates in different clades. Diversification patterns between New and Old World lineages show dramatic differences, suggesting that the processes of diversification in Gesneriaceae are very different in these two geographic regions.

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