Abstract

The phylogeny and biogeography of the genus Paphiopedilum were evaluated by using phylogenetic trees derived from analysis of nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences, the plastid trnL intron, the trnL-F spacer, and the atpB-rbcL spacer. This genus was divided into three subgenera: Parvisepalum, Brachypetalum, and Paphiopedilum. Each of them is monophyletic with high bootstrap supports according to the highly resolved phylogenetic tree reconstructed by combined sequences. There are five sections within the subgenus Paphiopedilum, including Coryopedilum, Pardalopetalum, Cochlopetalum, Paphiopedilum, and Barbata. The subgenus Parvisepalum is phylogenetic basal, which suggesting that Parvisepalum is comprising more ancestral characters than other subgenera. The evolutionary trend of genus Paphiopedilum was deduced based on the maximum likelihood (ML) tree and Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis Sampling Trees (BEAST). Reconstruct Ancestral State in Phylogenies (RASP) analyses based on the combined sequence data. The biogeographic analysis indicates that Paphiopedilum species were firstly derived in Southern China and Southeast Asia, subsequently dispersed into the Southeast Asian archipelagoes. The subgenera Paphiopedilum was likely derived after these historical dispersals and vicariance events. Our research reveals the relevance of the differentiation of Paphiopedilum in Southeast Asia and geological history. Moreover, the biogeographic analysis explains that the significant evolutionary hotspots of these orchids in the Sundaland and Wallacea might be attributed to repeated migration and isolation events between the south-eastern Asia mainland and the Sunda Super Islands.

Highlights

  • The orchid genus Paphiopedilum Pfitzer belongs to the subfamily Cypripedioideae Lindley

  • Primer sequences for amplifying of the atpB-rbcL spacer were designed from the conserved regions of the 3' end of the atpB gene and the 5'end of the rbcL gene of chloroplast DNA using sequences of different species obtained from GenBank

  • The lengths of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences obtained from the Paphiopedilum and outgroup samples were similar to those reported for a broad example of angiosperms (Baldwin, 1992; Baldwin et al, 1995)

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Summary

Introduction

The orchid genus Paphiopedilum Pfitzer belongs to the subfamily Cypripedioideae Lindley This subfamily has been considered a distinct lineage since Lindley (1840) separated them from other orchids based on the characteristic of having two separated fertile anthers [see (Cribb, 1998)]. This subfamily includes only five genera: Cypripedium, Mexipedium, Paphiopedilum, Phragmipedium, and Selenipedium. Mexipedium and Selenipedium are monotypic genera (Albert and Chase, 1992), which was a finding supported by ITS sequence analysis (Cox et al, 1997) These five genera are distributed in separate and restricted geographical ranges (Cribb, 1998). Paphiopedilum differs from Phragmipedium and Mexipedium, as they display imbricate sepal vernation, different chromosome base numbers and a unilocular ovary (Albert and Chase, 1992; Albert, 1994)

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