Abstract

One of the two major clades of the endemic American Amaryllidaceae subfam. Amaryllidoideae constitutes the tetraploid-derived (n = 23) Andean-centered tribes, most of which have 46 chromosomes. Despite progress in resolving phylogenetic relationships of the group with plastid and nrDNA, certain subclades were poorly resolved or weakly supported in those previous studies. Sequence capture using anchored hybrid enrichment was employed across 95 species of the clade along with five outgroups and generated sequences of 524 nuclear genes and a partial plastome. Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses were conducted on concatenated supermatrices, and coalescent-based species tree analyses were run on the gene trees, followed by hybridization network, age diversification and biogeographic analyses. The four tribes Clinantheae, Eucharideae, Eustephieae, and Hymenocallideae (sister to Clinantheae) are resolved in all analyses with > 90 and mostly 100% support, as are almost all genera within them. Nuclear gene supermatrix and species tree results were largely in concordance; however, some instances of cytonuclear discordance were evident. Hybridization network analysis identified significant reticulation in Clinanthus, Hymenocallis, Stenomesson and the subclade of Eucharideae comprising Eucharis, Caliphruria, and Urceolina. Our data support a previous treatment of the latter as a single genus, Urceolina, with the addition of Eucrosia dodsonii. Biogeographic analysis and penalized likelihood age estimation suggests an origin in the Cauca, Desert and Puna Neotropical bioprovinces for the complex in the mid-Oligocene, with more dispersals than vicariances in its history, but no extinctions. Hymenocallis represents the only instance of long-distance vicariance from the tropical Andean origin of its tribe Hymenocallideae. The absence of extinctions correlates with the lack of diversification rate shifts within the clade. The Eucharideae experienced a sudden lineage radiation ca. 10 Mya. We tie much of the divergences in the Andean-centered lineages to the rise of the Andes, and suggest that the Amotape—Huancabamba Zone functioned as both a corridor (dispersal) and a barrier to migration (vicariance). Several taxonomic changes are made. This is the largest DNA sequence data set to be applied within Amaryllidaceae to date.

Highlights

  • Amaryllidaceae J.St.-Hil. is a family of herbaceous monocots with a cosmopolitan distribution containing approximately 90 genera and 1,700–1,800 species (Meerow and Snijman, 1998) that originated in Africa (Meerow et al, 1999)

  • We present the results of such a phylogenomic approach across the Andean tetraploid clade of Amaryllidaceae subfam

  • MarkerMiner identified 751 single-copy nuclear (SCN) orthogroups which were reduced to 735 loci by excluding the orthogroups containing apparent paralogs, and sequence alignments were provided to Rapid Genomics (Gainesville, FL, United States) for probe design

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Summary

Introduction

Amaryllidaceae J.St.-Hil. is a family of herbaceous monocots with a cosmopolitan distribution containing approximately 90 genera and 1,700–1,800 species (Meerow and Snijman, 1998) that originated in Africa (Meerow et al, 1999). The family comprises three subfamilies (APG, 2003, 2009): Allidoideae Herb. (=Alliaceae J.G. Agardh, the economically-important onion family, 13 genera and 795 spp., the majority in Allium L.), South African Agapanthoideae Endl. The latter is the subject of this study and has a broad distribution, with a center of diversity in the southern hemisphere tropics. To this subfamily belong many of the world’s most celebrated ornamental bulbs, including daffodils (Narcissus L.), snowdrops (Galanthus L.) and “amaryllis” (Hippeastrum Herb.). Its species are characterized by 6-parted flowers with undifferentiated tepals and inferior ovaries, borne in pseudoumbels atop a leafless stalk known as a scape

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