Phylogeny and generic limits in the sister tribes Psychotrieae and Palicoureeae (Rubiaceae): Evolution of schizocarps in Psychotria and origins of bacterial leaf nodules of the Malagasy species

• Premise of the study: The pantropical, species-rich Psychotrieae and Palicoureeae are sister tribes of mostly drupe-bearing and nonbacterial leaf-nodulating species with problematic generic limits. This problem is more complicated in Psychotrieae due to the paraphyly of the genus Psychotria, the l...

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Published in:American journal of botany Vol. 101; no. 7; pp. 1102 - 1126
Main Authors: Razafimandimbison, Sylvain G, Taylor, Charlotte M, Wikström, Niklas, Pailler, Thierry, Khodabandeh, Anbar, Bremer, Birgitta
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Botanical Society of America 01-07-2014
Botanical Society of America, Inc
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Summary:• Premise of the study: The pantropical, species-rich Psychotrieae and Palicoureeae are sister tribes of mostly drupe-bearing and nonbacterial leaf-nodulating species with problematic generic limits. This problem is more complicated in Psychotrieae due to the paraphyly of the genus Psychotria, the lack of diagnostic characters for some major lineages, and the poor sampling from some biodiversity hotspots. Schizocarps and bacterial leaf nodules have been used for recognizing formal groups in Psychotrieae, but their evolution and taxonomic value have not been studied using a robust phylogeny of the tribe.• Methods: We analyzed 287 samples from the entire ranges of the tribes, with particular emphasis on the Western Indian Ocean region, with the Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo method.• Key results: All allied Psychotria genera investigated are nested within a paraphyletic Psychotria. Schizocarps evolved independently two times within Psychotria, and one reversal back to the drupaceous condition is inferred. The Malagasy leaf-nodulated Psychotrieae (except Apomuria bullata) and the Comorian non-leaf-nodulated Psychotria conocarpa are nested within the (African) leaf-nodulated clade. Within Palicoureeae, Chassalia is paraphyletic with respect to Geophila sensu stricto, and the Malagasy Geophila gerrardii and the African Hymenocoleus are closely related.• Conclusions: A widely circumscribed Psychotria encompassing the entire Psychotrieae is supported. Within Psychotria, two separate origins of schizocarps from drupes, one reversal back to the drupaceous condition, and two independent origins of the Malagasy leaf-nodulated species are inferred. A new genus Puffia is described to accommodate Geophila gerrardii, and a narrow circumscription of Chassalia is adopted. Thirty-two new combinations, two lectotypifications, and 25 new names are presented.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1400076
Chassalia
The authors thank the following herbaria staff for allowing access to their collections: BR, GB, K, MAU, MO, NOU, P, S, SEY, TAN, TEF, and UPS; the DGF (Direction Générale des Forêts) and MNP (Madagascar National Parks) in Madagascar for issuing collecting and exportation permits for S.G.R.; the Missouri Botanical Garden, Madagascar Program for logistical support; the Parc Botanique et Zoologique de Tsimbazaza and the Missouri Botanical Garden, Madagascar Program (F. Lantoarisoa) for arranging collecting and exportation permits for S.G.R.; the Mauritian, Reunionese, and Seychellois authorities for approving our research proposals to collect Rubiaceae in their respective countries; C. Baider and V. Florens for kindly organizing our field collecting on Mauritius; K. Beaver for arranging a collecting permit for S.G.R. and B.B.; B. Senterre and C. Kaiser‐Bunbury for their precious help to find Rubiaceae on Mahé (Seychelles); the Seychelle National Herbarium (SEY) at the Natural History Museum (Mahé, Seychelles); L. Barrabé, A. Davis, and A. Mouly for kindly providing material (DNA and/or leaf fragments); S. Malcomber for sharing a photo of
Freely available online through the AJB open access option.
sp.‐ck25; K. Kainulainen for technical help and comments on an earlier version of the manuscript; two anonymous reviewers and the Associate Editor (M. Simmons) for their constructive comments on an early version of the paper; and the Swedish Research Council and the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation for financial support to B.B. and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (FOA13H‐099‐A) to S.G.R.
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ISSN:0002-9122
1537-2197
1537-2197
DOI:10.3732/ajb.1400076