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Phylogenetics and historical biogeography of Encyclia (Laeliinae: Orchidaceae) with an emphasis on the E. adenocarpos complex, a new species, and a preliminary species list for the genus
We explore the phylogenetic position of the Encyclia adenocarpos complex through a multilocus analysis of Encyclia with the following DNA regions: ITS and plastid rpl32-trnL , trnL-F , and ycf1 , analyzed under the Bayesian inference and Maximum Parsimony paradigms. We also performed an analysis of...
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Published in: | Organisms diversity & evolution 2023-03, Vol.23 (1), p.41-75 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | We explore the phylogenetic position of the
Encyclia adenocarpos
complex through a multilocus analysis of
Encyclia
with the following DNA regions: ITS and plastid
rpl32-trnL
,
trnL-F
, and
ycf1
, analyzed under the Bayesian inference and Maximum Parsimony paradigms. We also performed an analysis of reconstruction of ancestral areas, with particular interest in the first diverging lineages of
Encyclia
. We used an
ad hoc
regionalization system designed to fit our distributional
Encyclia
data to reconstruct the ancestral distribution of the genus and the most relevant nodes. The analyses yielded a moderately well-supported topology with the broadest taxonomic
Encyclia
sampling yet. Our results indicate the
Encyclia adenocarpos
complex is monophyletic, highly supported, and sister to a large clade with ca. 95% of the species of
Encyclia
included in the analyses and suggest the clade is composed of several related, fundamentally allopatric species distributed along the Pacific slopes of Megamexico, including a novelty here proposed,
Encyclia mariaeugeniae
, which is closely related to
Encyclia enriquearcilae
yet differing in several diagnostic characters, such as a narrower central lobe to the labellum. The novelty was assessed as EN under IUCN criteria. We provide a key to the
E. adenocarpos
clade. Our
Encyclia
phylogeny identifies several clades displaying strong geographic signal; some of these are discussed in terms of morphology, ecological preferences, and pollination syndromes. The reconstruction of ancestral areas indicates with high probability that the earliest diverging nodes of
Encyclia
occurred in Megamexico. Floral variation within clades suggests the genus colonized geographical areas and underwent diversifications to occupy novel pollination syndromes in a pattern of allopatric, similar assemblages of syndromes composed of unrelated taxa. We present a preliminary species list of
Encyclia
and their distributions along the major biogeographic areas to provide a hypothesis of diversity patterns and the biogeographical areas where the species occur. As we currently understand the genus,
Encyclia
consists of 213 taxa, including 179 formally proposed species, 10 undescribed ones, and 25 nothotaxa. We provide five plates depicting 100 species to document the morphological and geographical diversity of
Encyclia
. |
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ISSN: | 1439-6092 1618-1077 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13127-022-00575-7 |