Abstract

BackgroundDrosanthemum, the only genus of the tribe Drosanthemeae, is widespread over the Greater Cape Floristic Region in southern Africa. With 114 recognized species, Drosanthemum, together with the highly succulent and species-rich tribe Ruschieae, constitute the ‘core ruschioids’ in Aizoaceae. Within Drosanthemum, nine subgenera have been described based on flower and fruit morphology. Their phylogenetic relationships, however, have not yet been investigated, hampering understanding of monophyletic entities and patterns of geographic distribution.MethodsUsing chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequence data, we performed network- and tree-based phylogenetic analyses of 73 species of Drosanthemum with multiple accessions for widespread species. A well-curated, geo-referenced occurrence dataset comprising the 134 genetically analysed and 863 further accessions was used to describe the distributional ranges of intrageneric lineages and the genus as a whole.ResultsPhylogenetic inference supports nine clades within Drosanthemum, seven of which group in two major clades, while the remaining two show ambiguous affinities. The nine clades are generally congruent to previously described subgenera within Drosanthemum, with exceptions such as cryptic species. In-depth analyses of sequence patterns in each gene region were used to reveal phylogenetic affinities inside the retrieved clades in more detail. We observe a complex distribution pattern including widespread, species-rich clades expanding into arid habitats of the interior (subgenera Drosanthemum p.p., Vespertina, Xamera) that are genetically and morphologically diverse. In contrast, less species-rich, genetically less divergent, and morphologically unique lineages are restricted to the central Cape region and more mesic conditions (Decidua, Necopina, Ossicula, Quastea, Quadrata, Speciosa). Our results suggest that the main lineages arose from an initial rapid radiation, with subsequent diversification in some clades.

Highlights

  • In the south-western corner of Africa, the iconic leaf-succulent Aizoaceae is one of the most species-rich families in the biodiversity hot-spot of the Greater Cape Floristic Region (GCFR; Born, Linder & Desmet 2007; Mittermeier et al 1998, 2004, 2011), ranking second in the number of endemic genera and fifth in the number of species (Manning & Goldblatt 2012)

  • We aim at filling some of the knowledge-gaps providing a synoptic overview on the current classification of the family, and a study of phylogenetic relationships in the enigmatic and hitherto, phylogenetically, almost neglected genus Drosanthemum

  • An exception was the rps16-trnQ intergenic spacer, which includes regions with extreme length-polymorphism and highly complex sequence patterns that are only alignable among closely related species

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Summary

Introduction

In the south-western corner of Africa, the iconic leaf-succulent Aizoaceae (ice plant family, including Lithops, ‘living stones’; Caryophyllales) is one of the most species-rich families in the biodiversity hot-spot of the Greater Cape Floristic Region (GCFR; Born, Linder & Desmet 2007; Mittermeier et al 1998, 2004, 2011), ranking second in the number of endemic genera and fifth in the number of species (Manning & Goldblatt 2012). 2017a) classified in 145 genera and five subfamilies (Klak, Hanáček & Bruyns 2017a; Fig. 1). The first three subfamilies – Sesuvioideae, Aizooideae, Acrosanthoideae – are successive sister to Mesembryanthemoideae + Ruschioideae (Klak et al 2003; Klak, Reeves & Hedderson 2004; Thiede 2004; Klak, Hanáček & Bruyns 2017b; for authors and species numbers see Fig. 1). Within Drosanthemum, nine subgenera have been described based on flower and fruit morphology. Their phylogenetic relationships, have not yet been investigated, hampering understanding of monophyletic entities and patterns of geographic distribution

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