Abstract

The results of a molecular genetic study of Potentilla multifida agg. using two plastid markers (ndhC-trnV and psbA-trnH) and a nuclear ITS marker suggested that this group comprises a number of relatively young and incompletely differentiated species widely distributed in Northern Eurasia. The sequences were analyzed using tree-based (maximum likelihood) and network-based (statistical parsimony network) approaches. The plastid data suggested incomplete lineage sorting, characteristic of the group as a whole. The nuclear ITS results demonstrated quite a different pattern, with mostly conspecific accessions shaping monophyletic clades. The majority of the Potentilla sect. Multifidae species studied possess few, usually closely related plastid haplotypes, or are even monomorphic. In contrast, P. volgarica, a narrow endemic from the Volga River valley, presents plastid haplotypes belonging to two distantly related groups. Such a pattern of genetic diversity in P. volgarica may be explained by a long persistence of the species within an extremely small distribution range, on the right bank of the Volga River, most likely representing a contemporary refugium. The genealogy of plastid markers in P. volgarica suggests that this species is ancestral to P. eversmanniana, another narrow endemic from the S Urals.

Highlights

  • The genus Potentilla L. comprises more than 300 species distributed worldwide in temperate areas and in mountainous regions in the tropics [1,2,3]

  • Our results suggest P. multifida agg. comprises a number of relatively young and incompletely genetically differentiated species widely distributed in Northern Eurasia

  • Plastid data suggest an incomplete lineage sorting (ILS) characteristic of the group as a whole, including P. nivea, traditionally referred to as a different section Niveae (Rydb.) A.Nelson. As it is clear from the plastid species tree (Figure 1), P. nivea shares the most basal haplotype A with a number of accessions of different species of P. multifida agg

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Potentilla L. comprises more than 300 species distributed worldwide in temperate areas and in mountainous regions in the tropics [1,2,3]. The existing phylogenies of Potentilla and the Potentilleae tribe are based on relatively small subsets of taxa and are still far from comprehensive [2,11,12,13,14,15]. Even in the cases where the taxa sets of Potentilleae were quite comprehensive [2,13], some groups of Potentilla s. Despite the existence of a number of relatively recent regional revisions and critical taxonomic accounts [7,16,17,18,19,20,21] the taxonomic system of the genus are still based on the monograph by Plants 2020, 9, 1798; doi:10.3390/plants9121798 www.mdpi.com/journal/plants

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