There and back again: historical biogeography of neotropical magnolias based on high-throughput sequencing
- Abstract
- Background The Neotropics are considered one of the most biodiverse areas in the world, housing at least one third of all vascular plant species. One of the genera that has diversified in the Neotropics is Magnolia, with about 174 species of three sections (Macrophylla, Magnolia and Talauma) endemic to the Americas. In this work, we study the biogeographic history of the Neotropical Magnolia species using high-throughput sequencing data. Sequences from 39 species (38 from Magnolia and one from the sister genus Liriodendron) were assembled. The dataset contained sequences from 239 nuclear targets and complete chloroplast genomes. Phylogenomic hypotheses and the ancestral distribution range of Magnolia were reconstructed.
Results The results of the calibrated phylogenetic hypotheses and ancestral range construction suggest that the earliest arrival in the Neotropics were the ancestors of section Talauma (38 million years ago), which colonized the Pacific region. This early presence in South America suggests long-distance, overwater dispersal from North America, the presumed origin of the genus Magnolia. The analysis and the extant Talauma distribution indicate a south to north recolonization. The ancestors of the other two Neotropical sections, Magnolia and Macrophylla, migrated around 19 mya from Asia to North Am
- Author(s)
- 김상태; Salvador Guzman‑Diaz; Fabián Augusto Aldaba Núñez; Emily Veltjen; Pieter Asselman; José Esteban Jiménez; Jorge Valdés Sánchez; Guillermo Pino Infante; Ricardo Callejas Posada; José Antonio Vázquez García; Isabel Larridon; Suhyeon Park; Esteban Manuel Martínez Salas; Marie‑Stéphanie Samain
- Issued Date
- 2025-04-30
- Type
- Article
- Keyword
- 식물분류/계통
- DOI
- 10.1186/s12862-025-02379-7
- URI
- http://repository.sungshin.ac.kr/handle/2025.oak/8871
- Publisher
- BMC
- ISSN
- 2730-7182
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Appears in Collections:
- 바이오신약의과학부 > 학술논문
- 공개 및 라이선스
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