Abstract

The lowlands of mid-latitude South America comprise complex temperate ecoregions characterized by a unique biodiversity. However, the processes responsible for shaping its species diversity are still largely unknown. Turnera sidoides subsp. carnea is a variable subspecies occurring in the lowlands of northeastern Argentina and Uruguay, extending to southern Paraguay and Brazil. It constitutes a good model to perform evolutionary studies. Here we used an integrative approach to understand the process of diversification within this subspecies and to increase the knowledge concerning patterns and processes responsible for shaping the species diversity in the temperate lowlands of South America. The results provided strong evidences that this subspecies is an autopolyploid complex per se, being in an active process of intrasubspecific diversification. Morphological and genetic data show that the diversity of T. sidoides subsp. carnea is in congruence with the great past and present abiotic and biotic variability of the mid-latitude South American lowlands. The evolutionary history of this subspecies is consistent with past fragmentation and allopatric differentiation at diploid level. Geographic isolation and local adaptation would have promoted strong morphological, ecological, and genetic differentiation, resulting in two morphotypes and different genetic groups indicative of incipient speciation.

Highlights

  • South America is composed of different biogeographical regions (Morrone 2000, 2006) and harbors the highest biodiversity in the world (Myers et al 2000)

  • More relevant is that the traits remained constant in the offspring of plants collected in the field and cultivated in the greenhouse

  • The fact that these traits persisted in plants cultivated under similar greenhouse conditions for several generations evidenced that morphological differences between both morphotypes of T. sidoides subsp. carnea have a high genetic component, as it was previously demonstrated for the morphotypes of other subspecies of the T. sidoides complex (Solís Neffa 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

South America is composed of different biogeographical regions (Morrone 2000, 2006) and harbors the highest biodiversity in the world (Myers et al 2000). The lowlands of mid-latitude South America comprise complex temperate ecoregions, including the Pampa and the Campos of Uruguay, northeastern Argentina and southern Brazil, characterized by a unique biodiversity (Miñarro & Bilenca 2008). These ecoregions have been overlooked in evolutionary studies, being the patterns and the processes responsible for shaping its species diversity still largely unknown (Speranza et al 2007, Antonelli & Sanmartın 2011, Turchetto-Zolet et al 2013).

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