4.5 Article

Phylogeny of Alisma (Alismataceae) revisited: implications for polyploid evolution and species delimitation

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JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH
卷 136, 期 5, 页码 613-629

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SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-023-01477-1

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Aquatic plants; Homologizer; nrITS; Molecular cloning; Phylogenetic inference; Phytochrome A; Stacey

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Alisma L. is a genus of aquatic and wetland plants with ten known species. Different ploidy levels have been observed, including diploids, tetraploids and hexaploids. Molecular phylogenetic analyses suggest that two closely related species in East Asia and one species endemic to Japan were generated from diploid progenitors, possibly through an evolutionary event in Japan. Species delimitation analysis revealed that A. orientale is distinct from the widespread A. plantago-aquatica and is apparently endemic to Southeast Asia.
Alisma L. is a genus of aquatic and wetland plants belonging to family Alismataceae. At present, it is thought to contain ten species. Variation in ploidy level is known in the genus, with diploids, tetraploids and hexaploids recorded. Previous molecular phylogenetic studies of Alisma have generated a robust backbone that reveals important aspects of the evolutionary history of this cosmopolitan genus, yet questions remain unresolved about the formation of the polyploid taxa and the taxonomy of one particularly challenging, widely distributed species complex. Here we directly sequenced, or cloned and sequenced, nuclear DNA (nrITS and phyA) and chloroplast DNA (matK, ndhF, psbA-trnH and rbcL) of multiple samples of six putative species and two varieties, and conducted molecular phylogenetic analyses. Alisma canaliculatum and its two varieties known in East Asia and A. rariflorum endemic to Japan possess closely related but heterogeneous genomes, strongly indicating that the two species were generated from two diploid progenitors, and are possibly siblings of one another. This evolutionary event may have occurred in Japan. Alisma canaliculatum var. canaliculatum is segregated into two types, each of which are geographically slightly differentiated in Japan. We reconstructed a single phylogeny based on the multi-locus data using Homologizer and then applied species delimitation analysis (STACEY). This allowed us to discern A. orientale as apparently endemic to the Southeast Asian Massif and distinct from the widespread A. plantago-aquatica. The former species was most likely formed through parapatric speciation at the southern edge of the distribution of the latter.

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