Abstract

Coriaria, which has the most conspicuously disjunct distribution of the flowering plants, is distributed in four separate areas of the world. The phylogenetic relationships of 12 Coriaria species collected from the representative disjunct areas were inferred by comparing 2416 bp of the combined data set of rbcL (a large subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) and matK (maturase K) genes. The phylogenetic tree shows that the Chile–Papua New Guinea–New Zealand–Pacific islands species and the Central America–northern South America species form a sister group, and the Eurasian clade is more basal to them. The divergence time between the Eurasian group and the other species was estimated as 63 or 59 million years ago using rbcL and matK molecular clocks, respectively. These results do not support previously proposed hypotheses which explain the disjunct distribution on the basis of continental drift but suggest that the distribution pattern was formed by several geographical migrations and separations in the Cenozoic.

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