Molecular phylogenetic relationships and morphological evolution in the heterosporous fern genus Marsilea
Abstract
Using six plastid regions, we present a phylogeny for 26 species of the heterosporous
fern genus Marsilea. Two well-supported groups within Marsilea are identified. Group
I includes two subgroups, and is relatively species-poor. Species assignable to this
group have glabrous leaves (although land leaves may have a few hairs), sporocarps
lacking both a raphe and teeth, and share a preference for submerged conditions (i.e.,
they are intolerant of desiccation). Group II is relatively diverse, and its members
have leaves that are pubescent, sporocarps that bear a raphe and from zero to two
teeth, and the plants are often emergent at the edges of lakes and ponds. Within Group
II, five subgroups receive robust support: three are predominantly African, one is
New World, and one Old World. Phylogenetic assessment of morphological evolution suggests
that the presence of an inferior sporocarp tooth and the place of sporocarp maturation
are homoplastic characters, and are therefore of unreliable taxonomic use at an infrageneric
level. In contrast, the presence of a raphe and superior sporocarp tooth are reliable
synapomorphies for classification within Marsilea. © Copyright 2007 by the American
Society of Plant Taxonomists.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Science & TechnologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine
Plant Sciences
Evolutionary Biology
ancestral state reconstruction
Marsilea
Marsileaceae
phylogeny
Salviniales
trnG-trnR intergenic spacer
MONOPHYLETIC GROUPS
RBCL
SEQUENCES
SYSTEMATICS
LEMNACEAE
REGIONS
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21811Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1600/036364407780360256Publication Info
Nagalingum, NS; Schneider, H; & Pryer, KM (2007). Molecular phylogenetic relationships and morphological evolution in the heterosporous
fern genus Marsilea. Systematic Botany, 32(1). pp. 16-25. 10.1600/036364407780360256. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21811.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Kathleen M. Pryer
Professor of Biology

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