Abstract

Nucleotide sequences from the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the 18S–26S nuclear ribosomal DNA have been studied from ten species ofQuercus (representing four subgenera),Castanea sativa andFagus sylvatica, as a preliminary molecular contribution to the still poorly understood systematics and evolution ofFagaceae. The resulting matrix has been used to calculate pair-wise sequence divergence indices and to construct a maximum parsimony tree forQuercus coding indels as a fifth state. Divergence is greater forQuercus vs.Fagus than forQuercus vs.Castanea. The tree for theQuercus taxa studied reveals two clearly divergent clades. In clade I the evergreen W MediterraneanQ. suber appears in a basal position as sister to more distal deciduous taxa, i.e. the E MediterraneanQ. macrolepis and the E AsiaticQ. acutissima (all formerly united as different sections under the apparently polyphyletic subg.Cerris), andQ. rubra (a representative of the N American subg.Erythrobalanus), forming a pair withQ. acutissima. In clade II the evergreen southeastern N AmericanQ. virginiana is basal and sister to the remaining three branches, i.e. a pair of evergreen Mediterranean taxa withQ. ilex andQ. coccifera (subg.Sclerophyllodrys), the deciduous but otherwise plesiomorphic SE European/SW AsiaticQ. cerris (type species of subg.Cerris), and the related but more apomorphic European pairQ. petraea andQ. robur (subg.Quercus). These results partly conflict with current taxonomic classification but are supported by some anatomical and morphological characters. They document polyphyletic lines from evergreen to deciduous taxa and suggest Tertiary transcontinental connections within the genus.

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