Browse References
Navigation
2800
references found
Phylogeny of the gymnosperm genus Cycas L. (Cycadaceae) as inferred from plastid and nuclear loci based on a large-scale sampling: Evolutionary relationships and taxonomical implications
Journal Article
📖
Liu J, Zhang S, Nagalingum NS, Chiang YC, Lindstrom AJ, Gong X. 2018. Phylogeny of the gymnosperm genus Cycas L. (Cycadaceae) as inferred from plastid and nuclear loci based on a large-scale sampling: Evolutionary relationships and taxonomical implications. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 127
: 87-97.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.05.019.
Abstract
The gymnosperm genus Cycas is the sole member of Cycadaceae and is the largest genus of extant cycads. There are about 115 accepted Cycas species, mainly distributed in the paleotropics. Based on morphology, the genus has been divided into six sections and eight subsections, but this taxonomy has not yet been tested in a molecular phylogenetic framework. Although the monophyly of Cycas is broadly accepted, the intrageneric relationships inferred from previous molecular phylogenetic analyses are unclear due to insufficient sampling or uninformative DNA sequence data. In this study, we reconstructed a phylogeny of Cycas using four chloroplast intergenic spacers and seven low-copy nuclear genes, sampling 90% of extant Cycas species. The maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference phylogenies suggest: (1) matrices of either concatenated cpDNA markers or concatenated nDNA lack sufficient informative sites to resolve the phylogeny alone; however, the phylogeny from the combined cpDNA-nDNA dataset suggests the genus can be roughly divided into 13 clades and six sections that are in agreement with the current classification of the genus; (2) although with partial support, a clade combining sections Panzhihuaenses + Asiorientales is resolved as the earliest diverging branch; (3) section Stangerioides is not monophyletic because the species resolve as a grade; (4) section Indosinenses is not monophyletic as it includes Cycas macrocarpa and C. pranburiensis from section Cycas; (5) section Cycas is the most derived group and its subgroups correspond with geography.
Cited By 42
Citations are collected from multiple sources and deduplicated for display
Sources:
OpenAlex
Citations:
Sources: OpenAlex & OpenCitations • Counts may differ from Crossref/Google Scholar
{
const emailField = mode === 'register' ? document.getElementById('name') : document.getElementById('email');
if (emailField) emailField.focus();
}, 100)"
class="fixed inset-0 z-50 overflow-y-auto"
style="display: none;">