Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe

With over 700 species, the Pavetteae are one o f the largest tribes in the subfamily Dialypetalanthoideae (formerly: Ixoroideae). Pavetteae representatives are characterized by a high morphological variation, especially regarding the reproductive characters (e.g., number of seeds per fruit, seed typ...

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Autores principales: Bawin, Y., Janssens, S. B., Verstraete, B., de Backer, S., Razafimandimbison, S. G., De Block, R.
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Instituto de Botánica del Nordeste 2023
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/bon/article/view/6948
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spelling I48-R154-article-69482023-12-27T22:56:30Z Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe Bawin, Y. Janssens, S. B. Verstraete, B. de Backer, S. Razafimandimbison, S. G. De Block, R. With over 700 species, the Pavetteae are one o f the largest tribes in the subfamily Dialypetalanthoideae (formerly: Ixoroideae). Pavetteae representatives are characterized by a high morphological variation, especially regarding the reproductive characters (e.g., number of seeds per fruit, seed type and placentation). Representatives of the tribe occur throughout the Paleotropics in humid and dry vegetation types. In the Asian-Pacific región ca 300 species are currently described whereas on continental Africa and Madagascar (and Western Indian Ocean Islands) ca 350 and ca 80 species are present, respectively. Recently many new genera have been recognized among the Malagasy Pavetteae species (e.g. Tulearia). In addition, it is clear that within the paleotropical genus Tarenna there will be a split into different genera. Not only is the taxonomic history of the tribe rather complicated, also the biogeographical history and evolutionary patterns of the tribe remain understudied to date. Molecular phylogenetics combined with age inference methods, diversificaron analyses and ancestral area reconstruction clearly indicate that current diversity of the Pavetteae is the result of several dispersal events within the Paleotropical region. Moreover, several shifts in ecological preference have likely driven the evolutionary history within the Pavetteae. Instituto de Botánica del Nordeste 2023-10-26 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/bon/article/view/6948 Bonplandia; Vol. 32 (2023): Suplemento; 11 Bonplandia; Vol. 32 (2023): Suplemento; 11 1853-8460 0524-0476 eng https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/bon/article/view/6948/6362 Derechos de autor 2023 Bonplandia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
institution Universidad Nacional del Nordeste
institution_str I-48
repository_str R-154
container_title_str Revistas UNNE - Universidad Nacional del Noroeste (UNNE)
language Inglés
format Artículo revista
author Bawin, Y.
Janssens, S. B.
Verstraete, B.
de Backer, S.
Razafimandimbison, S. G.
De Block, R.
spellingShingle Bawin, Y.
Janssens, S. B.
Verstraete, B.
de Backer, S.
Razafimandimbison, S. G.
De Block, R.
Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
author_facet Bawin, Y.
Janssens, S. B.
Verstraete, B.
de Backer, S.
Razafimandimbison, S. G.
De Block, R.
author_sort Bawin, Y.
title Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
title_short Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
title_full Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
title_fullStr Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
title_full_unstemmed Evolution and biogeography of the Pavetteae tribe
title_sort evolution and biogeography of the pavetteae tribe
description With over 700 species, the Pavetteae are one o f the largest tribes in the subfamily Dialypetalanthoideae (formerly: Ixoroideae). Pavetteae representatives are characterized by a high morphological variation, especially regarding the reproductive characters (e.g., number of seeds per fruit, seed type and placentation). Representatives of the tribe occur throughout the Paleotropics in humid and dry vegetation types. In the Asian-Pacific región ca 300 species are currently described whereas on continental Africa and Madagascar (and Western Indian Ocean Islands) ca 350 and ca 80 species are present, respectively. Recently many new genera have been recognized among the Malagasy Pavetteae species (e.g. Tulearia). In addition, it is clear that within the paleotropical genus Tarenna there will be a split into different genera. Not only is the taxonomic history of the tribe rather complicated, also the biogeographical history and evolutionary patterns of the tribe remain understudied to date. Molecular phylogenetics combined with age inference methods, diversificaron analyses and ancestral area reconstruction clearly indicate that current diversity of the Pavetteae is the result of several dispersal events within the Paleotropical region. Moreover, several shifts in ecological preference have likely driven the evolutionary history within the Pavetteae.
publisher Instituto de Botánica del Nordeste
publishDate 2023
url https://revistas.unne.edu.ar/index.php/bon/article/view/6948
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first_indexed 2024-08-21T22:36:57Z
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