TY - JOUR
T1 - Revised molecular phylogeny, global biogeography, and diversification of palms subfamily Coryphoideae (Arecaceae) based on low copy nuclear and plastid regions
AU - Kadam, Suhas K.
AU - Tamboli, Asif S.
AU - Mane, Rohit N.
AU - Yadav, Shrirang R.
AU - Choo, Yeon Sik
AU - Burgos-Hernández, Mireya
AU - Pak, Jae Hong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s) under exclusive licence to The Botanical Society of Japan.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Coryphoideae are palmate-leaved palms from the family Arecaceae consisting of 46 genera representing 421 species. Although several phylogenetic analyses based on different genomic regions have been carried out on Coryphoideae, a fully resolved molecular phylogenetic tree has not been reported yet. To achieve this, we applied two phylogenetic reconstruction methods: Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference, using amplified sampling by retrieving chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequences from NCBI and adding newly produced sequences from Indian accession into the dataset. The same dataset (chloroplast + nuclear DNA sequences) was used to estimate divergence times and the evolutionary history of Coryphoideae with a Bayesian uncorrelated, lognormal relaxed-clock approach and a Statistical Divergence-Vicariance Analysis method, respectively. The phylogenetic analyses based on a combined chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequence dataset showed well-resolved relationships within the subfamily. Both phylogenetic trees divide Coryphoideae into two main groups: CSPT (Crysophileae, Sabaleae, Phoeniceae, and Trachycarpeae) and the Syncarpous group. These main groups are segregated into eight tribes (Trachycarpeae, Phoeniceae, Sabaleae, Crysophileae, Borasseae, Corypheae, Caryoteae, and Chuniophoeniceae) and four subtribes (Rhapidine, Livistoninae, Hyphaeninae, and Lataniinae) with strong support-values. Most previously unresolved and doubtful relationships within tribes Trachycarpeae and Crysophilieae are now resolved and well-supported. The reconstructed phylogenetic trees support all previous systematic revisions of the subfamily. All Indian sampled species of Arenga, Bentinckia, Hyphaene, and Trachycarpus show close relation with their respective congeneric species. Molecular dating results and integration of biogeography suggest that Coryphoideae originated in Laurasia at ~95.12 Ma and then diverged into the tropical and subtropical regions of the whole world. This study offers the correct combination of nuclear and plastid regions to test the current and future systematic revisions.
AB - Coryphoideae are palmate-leaved palms from the family Arecaceae consisting of 46 genera representing 421 species. Although several phylogenetic analyses based on different genomic regions have been carried out on Coryphoideae, a fully resolved molecular phylogenetic tree has not been reported yet. To achieve this, we applied two phylogenetic reconstruction methods: Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference, using amplified sampling by retrieving chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequences from NCBI and adding newly produced sequences from Indian accession into the dataset. The same dataset (chloroplast + nuclear DNA sequences) was used to estimate divergence times and the evolutionary history of Coryphoideae with a Bayesian uncorrelated, lognormal relaxed-clock approach and a Statistical Divergence-Vicariance Analysis method, respectively. The phylogenetic analyses based on a combined chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequence dataset showed well-resolved relationships within the subfamily. Both phylogenetic trees divide Coryphoideae into two main groups: CSPT (Crysophileae, Sabaleae, Phoeniceae, and Trachycarpeae) and the Syncarpous group. These main groups are segregated into eight tribes (Trachycarpeae, Phoeniceae, Sabaleae, Crysophileae, Borasseae, Corypheae, Caryoteae, and Chuniophoeniceae) and four subtribes (Rhapidine, Livistoninae, Hyphaeninae, and Lataniinae) with strong support-values. Most previously unresolved and doubtful relationships within tribes Trachycarpeae and Crysophilieae are now resolved and well-supported. The reconstructed phylogenetic trees support all previous systematic revisions of the subfamily. All Indian sampled species of Arenga, Bentinckia, Hyphaene, and Trachycarpus show close relation with their respective congeneric species. Molecular dating results and integration of biogeography suggest that Coryphoideae originated in Laurasia at ~95.12 Ma and then diverged into the tropical and subtropical regions of the whole world. This study offers the correct combination of nuclear and plastid regions to test the current and future systematic revisions.
KW - Biogeographic analysis
KW - Divergence times
KW - Laurasia
KW - Molecular phylogeny
KW - Palms
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85144096089&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10265-022-01425-5
DO - 10.1007/s10265-022-01425-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 36520246
AN - SCOPUS:85144096089
SN - 0918-9440
VL - 136
SP - 159
EP - 177
JO - Journal of Plant Research
JF - Journal of Plant Research
IS - 2
ER -