Phylogeny and biogeography of Ceiba Mill. (Malvaceae, Bombacoideae)
Pezzini, FF; Dexter, KG; De Carvalho-Sobrinho, JG; et al.Kidner, CA; Nicholls, JA; De Queiroz, LP; Pennington, RT
Date: 21 June 2021
Article
Journal
Frontiers of Biogeography
Publisher
International Biogeography Society
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
The Neotropics is the most species-rich area in the world,
and the mechanisms that generated and maintain its
biodiversity are still debated. This paper contributes
to the debate by investigating the evolutionary and
biogeographic history of the genus Ceiba Mill. (Malvaceae,
Bombacoideae). Ceiba comprises 18 mostly Neotropical
species, ...
The Neotropics is the most species-rich area in the world,
and the mechanisms that generated and maintain its
biodiversity are still debated. This paper contributes
to the debate by investigating the evolutionary and
biogeographic history of the genus Ceiba Mill. (Malvaceae,
Bombacoideae). Ceiba comprises 18 mostly Neotropical
species, largely endemic to two major biomes, seasonally
dry tropical forests (SDTFs) and rain forests. Its species are
among the most characteristic elements of Neotropical
SDTF, one of the most threatened biomes in the tropics.
Phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequence data (from the
nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacers [nrITS]
for 30 accessions representing 14 species of Ceiba)
recovered the genus as monophyletic. The phylogeny
showed geographic and ecological structure in three
main clades: (i) a rain forest lineage of nine accessions
of C. pentandra sister to the remaining species; (ii) a
highly supported clade composed of C. schottii and
C. aesculifolia from Central American and Mexican SDTF,
plus two accessions of C. samauma from semi-humid,
inter Andean valleys in Peru; and (iii) a highly supported
South American SDTF clade including 10 species showing
little sequence variation. Within this South American SDTF
clade, no species represented by multiple accessions
were resolved as monophyletic. We demonstrate that
the patterns of species age, monophyly, and geographic
structure previously reported for SDTF species within the
Leguminosae family are not shared by Ceiba, suggesting
that further phylogenetic studies of unrelated groups are
required to understand general patterns.
Geography - old structure
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