Veuillez utiliser cette adresse pour citer ce document : http://dspace.univ-bouira.dz:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10180
Titre: Tracking temporal shifts in area, biomes, and pollinators in the radiation of Salvia (sages) across continents: leveraging anchored hybrid enrichment and targeted sequence data
Auteur(s): Kriebel, Ricardo
Drew, Bryan T.
Drummond, Chloe P
González-Gallegos, Jesús G.
Celep, Ferhat
Mahdjoub, Mohamed Malik
Rose, Jeffrey P.
Xiang, Chun-Lei
Hu, Guo-Xiong
Walker, Jay B.
Lemmon, Emily M.
Lemmon, Alan R.
Sytsma, Kenneth J.
Mots-clés: adaptive radiation
BioGeoBEARS
evolution
historical biogeography
hummingbird
Lamiaceae
long-distance dispersal
niche
phylogenomics
species diversification.
Date de publication: avr-2019
Editeur: Université de Bouira
Référence bibliographique: American journal of botany; Volume 106 ,Numéro 4 ,Pages 573-597
Résumé: PREMISE OF THE STUDY: A key question in evolutionary biology is why some clades are more successful by being widespread geographically, biome diverse, or species-rich. To extend understanding of how shifts in area, biomes, and pollinators impact diversification in plants, we examined the relationships of these shifts to diversification across the mega-genus Salvia. METHODS: A chronogram was developed from a supermatrix of anchored hybrid enrichment genomic data and targeted sequence data for over 500 of the nearly 1000 Salvia species. Ancestral areas and biomes were reconstructed using BioGeoBEARS. Pollinator guilds were scored, ancestral pollinators determined, shifts in pollinator guilds identified, and rates of pollinator switches compared. KEY RESULTS: A well-resolved phylogenetic backbone of Salvia and updated subgeneric designations are presented. Salvia originated in Southwest Asia in the Oligocene and subsequently dispersed worldwide. Biome shifts are frequent from a likely ancestral lineage utilizing broadleaf and/or coniferous forests and/or arid shrublands. None of the four species diversification shifts are correlated to shifts in biomes. Shifts in pollination system are not correlated to species diversification shifts, except for one hummingbird shift that precedes a major shift in diversification near the crown of New World subgen. Calosphace. Multiple reversals back to bee pollination occurred within this hummingbird clade.
URI/URL: http://dspace.univ-bouira.dz:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10180
Collection(s) :Articles



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