Abstract
The phylogenetic placements of several African endemic genera at the base of Apiaceae subfamilies Saniculoideae and Apioideae have revolutionized ideas of relationships that affect hypotheses of character evolution and biogeography. Using an explicit phylogeny of subfamily Saniculoideae, we reconstructed the evolutionary history of phenotypic characters traditionally important in classification, identified those characters most useful in supporting relationships, and inferred historical biogeography. The 23 characters examined include those of life history, vegetative morphology, inflorescences, and fruit morphology and anatomy. These characters were optimized over trees derived from maximum parsimony analysis of chloroplast DNA trnQ-trnK sequences from 94 accessions of Apiaceae. The results revealed that many of these characters have undergone considerable modification and that traditional assumptions regarding character-state polarity are often incorrect. Infrasubfamilial relationships inferred by molecular data are supported by one to five morphological characters. However, none of these morphological characters support the monophyly of subfamilies Saniculoideae or Apioideae, the clade of Petagnaea, Eryngium and Sanicula, or the sister-group relationship between Eryngium and Sanicula . Southern African origins of Saniculoideae and of its tribes Steganotaenieae and Saniculeae are supported based on dispersal-vicariance analysis.
Highlights
Patterns of morphological character evolution and historical biogeography are important in understanding evolutionary processes
The interpretation of the phenotypic character evolution and biogeography of Apiaceae has been greatly influenced by the predominant system of classification for the family proposed by Drude (1898) over a century ago
The recent phylogenetic placements of several African endemic genera at the base of Apiaceae subfamilies Saniculoideae and Apioideae have changed our inferences on the relationships within Apiaceae and have changed previous hypotheses on morphological character evolution and historical biogeography (Calviño et al, 2006; Calviño and Downie, 2007)
Summary
Patterns of morphological character evolution and historical biogeography are important in understanding evolutionary processes. The recent phylogenetic placements of several African endemic genera at the base of Apiaceae subfamilies Saniculoideae and Apioideae have changed our inferences on the relationships within Apiaceae and have changed previous hypotheses on morphological character evolution and historical biogeography (Calviño et al, 2006; Calviño and Downie, 2007). With explicit hypotheses of phylogenetic relationships available for basal Apioideae (Calviño et al, 2006) and Saniculoideae (Calviño and Downie, 2007), patterns of character evolution within subfamily Saniculoideae and its historical biogeography can be interpreted objectively. The major objectives of this study are to (1) reconstruct the evolutionary history of selected morphological characters in Saniculoideae, (2) identify those morphological characters that are most useful in supporting phylogenetic relationships estimated on the basis of molecular data, and (3) estimate the origin of subfamily Saniculoideae and reconstruct its subsequent biogeographic history
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