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Phylogeny of Elatinaceae and the Tropical Gondwanan Origin of the Centroplacaceae(Malpighiaceae, Elatinaceae) Clade

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Cai, Liming, Zhenxiang Xi, Kylee Peterson, Catherine Rushworth, Jeremy Beaulieu, and Charles C. Davis. 2016. “Phylogeny of Elatinaceae and the Tropical Gondwanan Origin of the Centroplacaceae(Malpighiaceae, Elatinaceae) Clade.” PLoS ONE 11 (9): e0161881. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0161881. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161881.

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Abstract

The flowering plant family Elatinaceae is a widespread aquatic lineage inhabiting temperate and tropical latitudes, including ∼35(-50) species. Its phylogeny remains largely unknown, compromising our understanding of its systematics. Moreover, this group is particularly in need of attention because the biogeography of most aquatic plant clades has yet to be investigated, resulting in uncertainty about whether aquatic plants show histories that deviate from terrestrial plants. We inferred the phylogeny of Elatinaceae from four DNA regions spanning 59 accessions across the family. An expanded sampling was used for molecular divergence time estimation and ancestral area reconstruction to infer the biogeography of Elatinaceae and their closest terrestrial relatives, Malpighiaceae and Centroplacaceae. The two genera of Elatinaceae, Bergia and Elatine, are monophyletic, but several traditionally recognized groups within the family are non-monophyletic. Our results suggest two ancient biogeographic events in the Centroplacaceae(Malpighiaceae, Elatinaceae) clade involving western Gondwana, while Elatinaceae shows a more complicated biogeographic history with a high degree of continental endemicity. Our results indicate the need for further taxonomic investigation of Elatinaceae. Further, our study is one of few to implicate ancient Gondwanan biogeography in extant angiosperms, especially significant given the Centroplacaceae(Malpighiaceae, Elatinaceae) clade's largely tropical distribution. Finally, Elatinaceae demonstrates long-term continental in situ diversification, which argues against recent dispersal as a universal explanation commonly invoked for aquatic plant distributions.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Biogeography, Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Earth Sciences, Geography, Evolutionary Biology, Evolutionary Systematics, Phylogenetics, Taxonomy, Computer and Information Sciences, Data Management, Organisms, Plants, Flowering Plants, Molecular Biology, Molecular Biology Techniques, Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques, Phylogenetic Analysis, People and Places, Geographical Locations, Africa, People and places, Geographical locations, South America, Paleontology, Paleogenetics, Paleobiology, Paleobotany

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