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(American Journal of Botany. 2004;91:1901-1914.)
© 2004 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Systematics

Phylogeny and infrageneric classification of Symplocos (Symplocaceae) inferred from DNA sequence data1

Yuguo Wang2,5, Peter W. Fritsch3,6, Suhua Shi2,6, Frank Almeda3, Boni C. Cruz3 and Lawrence M. Kelly4

2State Key Laboratory, School of Life Sciences, Zhongshan University, Guangzhou 510275, People's Republic of China; 3Department of Botany, California Academy of Sciences, 875 Howard Street, San Francisco, California 94103 USA; 4The New York Botanical Garden, Cullman Program for Molecular Systematics Studies, 200th St. & Southern Blvd., Bronx, New York 10458 USA

Symplocos comprises ~300 species of woody flowering plants with a disjunct distribution between the warm-temperate to tropical regions of eastern Asia and the Americas. Phylogenetic analyses of 111 species of Symplocos based on the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the chloroplast genes rpl16, matK, and trnL–trnF yielded topologies in which only one of the four traditionally recognized subgenera (Epigenia; Neotropics) is monophyletic. Section Cordyloblaste (subgenus Symplocos; eastern Asia) is monophyletic and sister to a group comprising all other samples of Symplocos. Section Palura (subgenus Hopea; eastern Asia) is sister to a group comprising all other samples of Symplocos except those of section Cordyloblaste. Symplocos wikstroemiifolia (eastern Asia) and S. tinctoria (southeastern United States), both of subgenus Hopea, form a clade that groups with S. longipes (tropical North America) and the species of subgenus Epigenia. The remaining samples of subgenus Hopea (eastern Asia) form a clade. Section Neosymplocos (subgenus Microsymplocos; Neotropics) is well nested within a clade otherwise comprising the samples of section Symplocastrum (subgenus Symplocos; Neotropics). Section Urbaniocharis (subgenus Microsymplocos; Antilles) groups as sister to the clade comprising Symplocastrum and Neosymplocos. The data support the independent evolution of deciduousness among section Palura and S. tinctoria. The early initial divergence of sections Cordyloblaste and Palura from the main group warrants their recognition at taxonomic levels higher than those at which they are currently placed. An inferred eastern Asian origin for Symplocos with subsequent dispersal to the Americas is consistent with patterns from other phylogenetic studies of eastern Asian-American disjunct plant groups but contrary to a North American origin inferred from the earliest fossil occurrences of the genus.

Key Words: disjunction • ITS • matK • phylogeny • rpl16 • Symplocaceae • SymplocostrnL–trnF




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