Abstract

BackgroundThe classification of royal ferns (Osmundaceae) has long remained controversial. Recent molecular phylogenies indicate that Osmunda is paraphyletic and needs to be separated into Osmundastrum and Osmunda s.str. Here, however, we describe an exquisitely preserved Jurassic Osmunda rhizome (O. pulchella sp. nov.) that combines diagnostic features of both Osmundastrum and Osmunda, calling molecular evidence for paraphyly into question. We assembled a new morphological matrix based on rhizome anatomy, and used network analyses to establish phylogenetic relationships between fossil and extant members of modern Osmundaceae. We re-analysed the original molecular data to evaluate root-placement support. Finally, we integrated morphological and molecular data-sets using the evolutionary placement algorithm.ResultsOsmunda pulchella and five additional Jurassic rhizome species show anatomical character suites intermediate between Osmundastrum and Osmunda. Molecular evidence for paraphyly is ambiguous: a previously unrecognized signal from spacer sequences favours an alternative root placement that would resolve Osmunda s.l. as monophyletic. Our evolutionary placement analysis identifies fossil species as probable ancestral members of modern genera and subgenera, which accords with recent evidence from Bayesian dating.ConclusionsOsmunda pulchella is likely a precursor of the Osmundastrum lineage. The recently proposed root placement in Osmundaceae—based solely on molecular data—stems from possibly misinformative outgroup signals in rbcL and atpA genes. We conclude that the seemingly conflicting evidence from morphological, anatomical, molecular, and palaeontological data can instead be elegantly reconciled under the assumption that Osmunda is indeed monophyletic.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0400-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The classification of royal ferns (Osmundaceae) has long remained controversial

  • The royal ferns (Osmundales) comprise about 20 extant species currently classified in four genera, i.e. Osmunda L., Osmundastrum C.Presl, Leptopteris C.Presl, and Todea Bernh

  • With subsequent descriptions of additional species from East and Southeast Asia [41,42,43,44], the genus was subdivided into several subgenera, i.e. O. subgenus Osmunda, O. subgenus Plenasium (C.Presl) J.Smith, O. subgenus Osmundastrum (C.Presl) C.Presl, and O. subgenus Claytosmunda Y.Yatabe, N.Murak. & K.Iwats. based on combinations of diagnostic morphological and anatomical characters and—more recently—molecular phylogenetic analyses [31, 32, 45]

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Summary

Introduction

The classification of royal ferns (Osmundaceae) has long remained controversial. Recent molecular phylogenies indicate that Osmunda is paraphyletic and needs to be separated into Osmundastrum and Osmunda s.str. We assembled a new morphological matrix based on rhizome anatomy, and used network analyses to establish phylogenetic relationships between fossil and extant members of modern Osmundaceae. The royal ferns (Osmundales) comprise about 20 extant species currently classified in four genera, i.e. Osmunda L., Osmundastrum C.Presl, Leptopteris C.Presl, and Todea Bernh. This small group of ferns is remarkable in many respects and, has attracted considerable scholarly attention. Most controversy has arisen concerning the phylogenetic relationships and taxonomic ranks of O. cinnamomea and O. claytoniana (please refer to the nomenclatural remark in the methods section for information on the use of taxon names )

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