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Out of southern Africa: Origin, biogeography and age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae).
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017 04; 109:203-216.MP

Abstract

The Aizooideae is an early-diverging lineage within the Aizoaceae. It is most diverse in southern Africa, but also has endemic species in Australasia, Eurasia and South America. We derived a phylogenetic hypothesis from Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood analyses of plastid DNA-sequences. We find that one of the seven genera, the fynbos-endemic Acrosanthes, does not belong to the Aizooideae, but is an ancient sister-lineage to the subfamilies Mesembryanthemoideae & Ruschioideae. Galenia and Plinthus are embedded inside Aizoon and Aizoanthemum is polyphyletic. The Namibian endemic Tetragonia schenckii is sister to Tribulocarpus of the Sesuvioideae. For the Aizooideae, we explored their possible age by means of relaxed Bayesian dating and used Bayesian Binary MCMC reconstruction of ancestral areas to investigate their area of origin. Early diversification occurred in southern Africa in the Eocene-Oligocene, with a split into a mainly African lineage and an Eurasian-Australasian-African-South American lineage. These subsequently radiated in the early Miocene. For Tetragonia, colonisation of Australasia via long-distance dispersal from Eurasia gave rise to the Australasian lineage from which there were subsequent dispersals to South America and Southern Africa. Despite the relatively old age of the Aizooideae, more than half the species have radiated since the Pleiocene, coinciding with the large and rapid diversification of the Ruschioideae. The lineage made up of Tetragonia schenckii &Tribulocarpus split from the remainder of the Sesuvioideae already in the mid Oligocene and its disjunct distribution between Namibia and north-east Africa may be the result of a previously wider distribution within an early Arid African flora. Our reconstruction of ancestral character-states indicates that the expanding keels giving rise to hygrochastic fruits originated only once, i.e. after the split of the Sesuvioideae from the remainder of the Aizoaceae and that they were subsequently lost many times. Variously winged and spiky fruits, adapted to dispersal by wind and animals, have evolved independently in the Aizooideae and the Sesuvioideae. There is then a greater diversity of dispersal systems in the earlier lineages than in the Mesembryanthemoideae and Ruschioideae, where dispersal is mainly achieved by rain.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Bolus Herbarium, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, 7701 Rondebosch, South Africa. Electronic address: Cornelia.Klak@uct.ac.za.Department of Plant Biology, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czech Republic.Bolus Herbarium, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, 7701 Rondebosch, South Africa.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27998816

Citation

Klak, Cornelia, et al. "Out of Southern Africa: Origin, Biogeography and Age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae)." Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, vol. 109, 2017, pp. 203-216.
Klak C, Hanáček P, Bruyns PV. Out of southern Africa: Origin, biogeography and age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae). Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017;109:203-216.
Klak, C., Hanáček, P., & Bruyns, P. V. (2017). Out of southern Africa: Origin, biogeography and age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 109, 203-216. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2016.12.016
Klak C, Hanáček P, Bruyns PV. Out of Southern Africa: Origin, Biogeography and Age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae). Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017;109:203-216. PubMed PMID: 27998816.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Out of southern Africa: Origin, biogeography and age of the Aizooideae (Aizoaceae). AU - Klak,Cornelia, AU - Hanáček,Pavel, AU - Bruyns,Peter V, Y1 - 2016/12/18/ PY - 2016/08/01/received PY - 2016/12/07/revised PY - 2016/12/12/accepted PY - 2016/12/22/pubmed PY - 2017/9/30/medline PY - 2016/12/22/entrez KW - Acrosanthes KW - Ancestral area KW - Disjunctions KW - Dispersal KW - Divergence times KW - Fruit-morphology KW - Phylogeny KW - Tribulocarpus SP - 203 EP - 216 JF - Molecular phylogenetics and evolution JO - Mol Phylogenet Evol VL - 109 N2 - The Aizooideae is an early-diverging lineage within the Aizoaceae. It is most diverse in southern Africa, but also has endemic species in Australasia, Eurasia and South America. We derived a phylogenetic hypothesis from Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood analyses of plastid DNA-sequences. We find that one of the seven genera, the fynbos-endemic Acrosanthes, does not belong to the Aizooideae, but is an ancient sister-lineage to the subfamilies Mesembryanthemoideae & Ruschioideae. Galenia and Plinthus are embedded inside Aizoon and Aizoanthemum is polyphyletic. The Namibian endemic Tetragonia schenckii is sister to Tribulocarpus of the Sesuvioideae. For the Aizooideae, we explored their possible age by means of relaxed Bayesian dating and used Bayesian Binary MCMC reconstruction of ancestral areas to investigate their area of origin. Early diversification occurred in southern Africa in the Eocene-Oligocene, with a split into a mainly African lineage and an Eurasian-Australasian-African-South American lineage. These subsequently radiated in the early Miocene. For Tetragonia, colonisation of Australasia via long-distance dispersal from Eurasia gave rise to the Australasian lineage from which there were subsequent dispersals to South America and Southern Africa. Despite the relatively old age of the Aizooideae, more than half the species have radiated since the Pleiocene, coinciding with the large and rapid diversification of the Ruschioideae. The lineage made up of Tetragonia schenckii &Tribulocarpus split from the remainder of the Sesuvioideae already in the mid Oligocene and its disjunct distribution between Namibia and north-east Africa may be the result of a previously wider distribution within an early Arid African flora. Our reconstruction of ancestral character-states indicates that the expanding keels giving rise to hygrochastic fruits originated only once, i.e. after the split of the Sesuvioideae from the remainder of the Aizoaceae and that they were subsequently lost many times. Variously winged and spiky fruits, adapted to dispersal by wind and animals, have evolved independently in the Aizooideae and the Sesuvioideae. There is then a greater diversity of dispersal systems in the earlier lineages than in the Mesembryanthemoideae and Ruschioideae, where dispersal is mainly achieved by rain. SN - 1095-9513 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27998816/Out_of_southern_Africa:_Origin_biogeography_and_age_of_the_Aizooideae__Aizoaceae__ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -