Abstract

The extant seed plants include more than 260,000 species that belong to five main lineages: angiosperms, conifers, cycads, Ginkgo, and gnetophytes. Despite tremendous effort using molecular data, phylogenetic relationships among these five lineages remain uncertain. Here, we provide the first broad coalescent-based species tree estimation of seed plants using genome-scale nuclear and plastid data By incorporating 305 nuclear genes and 47 plastid genes from 14 species, we identify that i) extant gymnosperms (i.e., conifers, cycads, Ginkgo, and gnetophytes) are monophyletic, ii) gnetophytes exhibit discordant placements within conifers between their nuclear and plastid genomes, and iii) cycads plus Ginkgo form a clade that is sister to all remaining extant gymnosperms. We additionally observe that the placement of Ginkgo inferred from coalescent analyses is congruent across different nucleotide rate partitions. In contrast, the standard concatenation method produces strongly supported, but incongruent placements of Ginkgo between slow- and fast-evolving sites. Specifically, fast-evolving sites yield relationships in conflict with coalescent analyses. We hypothesize that this incongruence may be related to the way in which concatenation methods treat sites with elevated nucleotide substitution rates. More empirical and simulation investigations are needed to understand this potential weakness of concatenation methods.

Highlights

  • Seed plants originated at least 370 million years ago [1] and include more than 260,000 extant species [2], making them the most species rich land plant clade

  • Our nuclear gene taxon sampling included 12 species representing all major lineages of extant seed plants [3]

  • Our results show that standard concatenation analyses of both nuclear and plastid genes produce well supported, but conflicting placements of key taxa across sites with different substitution rates

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Summary

Introduction

Seed plants originated at least 370 million years ago [1] and include more than 260,000 extant species [2], making them the most species rich land plant clade These species are placed in five main lineages: angiosperms, conifers, cycads, Ginkgo, and gnetophytes [3]. Early studies concatenating multiple genes placed Ginkgo alone as sister to conifers and gnetophytes within the extant gymnosperm clade [7,8,9,10,11,16,17,18,26,27,28]. More recent studies using additional genes have suggested that a clade containing cycads plus Ginkgo cannot be excluded as sister to all remaining extant gymnosperms (Figure 1D) [15,19,21,22,23,24,29,30].

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