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Origin of Macaronesian
Sideritis L. (Lamioideae: Lamiaceae) inferred from nuclear and
chloroplast sequence datasets.
Barber JC,
Francisco-Ortega J, Santos-Guerra A, Turner KG, Jansen
RK.
Department of Biology, University of Missouri, 8001
Natural Bridge Road, St. Louis 63121, USA.
barberjc@msx.umsl.edu
Sideritis L. (Lamiaceae) comprises
approximately 150 species of annuals and perennials distributed chiefly
in the Mediterranean region. The majority of the species belong to the
continental subgenus Sideritis which is divided into two perennial
(Sideritis and Empedoclea) and two annual (Hesiodia and Burgsdorfia)
sections. Twenty-three species are woody perennials endemic to the
Macaronesian archipelagos of Madeira and the Canary Islands. In an
effort to determine the continental origin of the insular group, we
constructed independent phylogenies comprising sequence data from both
chloroplast and nuclear markers. Sampling included 7 island taxa drawn
from the Macaronesian subgenus Marrubiastrum and 25 continental taxa
representing all four sections of subgenus Sideritis. Subgenus
Marrubiastrum and the two continental perennial sections form
well-supported monophyletic groups in both individual and combined
analyses. The annual sections are not monophyletic in any analysis;
further sampling of annual taxa is needed to resolve these
relationships. All analyses identified Sideritis cossoniana, an annual
species from Morocco, as the closest continental relative of the
Macaronesian group. This contrasts with the hypothesis of earlier
workers who suggested that the insular taxa were most closely related to
eastern Mediterranean species of the genus. The phylogenies also
demonstrate a distinct increase in woodiness among the Macaronesian
species relative to their continental congeners, providing further
support for the secondary nature of woodiness in island plants. (c) 2002
Elsevier Science (USA).
PMID: 12099789 [PubMed - indexed for
MEDLINE]
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