4.7 Article

Phylogenomics and diversification drivers of the Eastern Asian - Eastern North American disjunct Podophylloideae

期刊

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107427

关键词

Biogeography; Diversification; Diversity anomaly; Eastern Asia; Eastern North America; Phylogenomics; Podophylloideae

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872652, 31170200, 32001086]
  2. International Cooperation and Exchange of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31561143015]
  3. Biodiversity International Collaborative Project of NSFC-NSF [31461123001]
  4. Zhejiang Provincial Funds for Distinguished Young Scientists [LR12C02001]
  5. 2018 Zhejiang University Academic Award for Outstanding Doctoral Candidates

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This study investigates the species richness patterns of Podophylloideae between Eastern Asia and Eastern North America and finds that the higher species richness in Eastern Asia can be explained by a longer period of time available to accumulate species and a greater diversification rate in this region.
Evolutionary and biogeographic processes determine species richness patterns of vascular plants between Eastern Asia (EA) and Eastern North America (ENA). However, the strikingly higher species richness of EA relative to ENA remains poorly understood from this perspective. Here, we studied the relative importance of biogeographical, evolutionary and ecological factors underlying differences in species richness between EA and ENA in Podophylloideae (Berberidaceae, Ranunculales; in total 10 spp. in EA vs. 2 spp. in ENA). Based on large-scale transcriptome data, our phylogenomic analyses strongly supported Podophylloideae and its two multi-species genera, i.e. Dysosma (EA) and Diphylleia (EA/ENA), as monophyletic groups. Sinopodophyllum hexandrum (EA) was identified as sister to the remainder of Podophylloideae. Dysosma (7 spp.) was recovered as sister to Podophyllum peltatum (ENA), forming an EA-ENA disjunct pair with a strong bias of species diversity in the EA counterpart. Our biogeographic analyses support the 'out-of-Tibet' hypothesis, suggesting that Podophylloideae started to diversify in the Himalaya-Hengduan Mountains (Mid-Miocene) and migrated eastward (since the Late Miocene) into Central-eastern China, Japan, and ENA (only P. peltatum and Diphylleia cymosa). Overall, we conclude that the striking species diversity anomaly between EA and ENA in Podophylloideae may be explained by a combination of (1) a longer period of time available to accumulate species in EA; and (2) a greater diversification rate in EA, which might have been promoted by greater physiographic and environmental heterogeneity in this region.

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