Barking up the wrong tree the dangers of taxonomic misidentification in molecular phylogenetic studies
Background and aims – Keraunea is a Brazilian endemic genus that has sat uncomfortably in Convolvulaceae where it was placed due to an enlarged and adnate fruit bract typical of Neuropeltis . A recent molecular phylogeny suggested that two of its five morphologically almost identical species actuall...
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Published in | Plant ecology and evolution Vol. 156; no. 2; pp. 146 - 159 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Meise
Royal Botanical Society of Belgium
01.01.2023
Pensoft Publishers Meise Botanic Garden |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background and aims
–
Keraunea
is a Brazilian endemic genus that has sat uncomfortably in Convolvulaceae where it was placed due to an enlarged and adnate fruit bract typical of
Neuropeltis
. A recent molecular phylogeny suggested that two of its five morphologically almost identical species actually belong to two different families, Malpighiaceae (superrosids) and Ehretiaceae (superasterids). Later studies have demonstrated that
Keraunea
effectively belongs to Ehretiaceae, but the proposal of one species belonging to Malpighiaceae has remained problematic. In this study, we re-assess this hypothesis, discuss the issues that have led to this assumption, and offer insights on the importance of carefully using herbarium collections and incorporating morphological evidence in systematic studies.
Material and methods
– Sequences of
matK
,
rbcL
, and ITS for all 77 currently accepted genera of Malpighiaceae,
K. brasiliensis
and Elatinaceae (outgroup) were compiled from GenBank and analysed with Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference criteria for nuclear, plastid and combined datasets. Additional database and herbarium studies were performed to locate and analyse all duplicates of the holotype of
K. brasiliensis
to check for misidentified or contaminated material.
Key results
– Our examination of expanded DNA datasets and herbarium sheets of all
K. brasiliensis
isotypes revealed that a mistake in tissue sampling was, in fact, what led to this species being proposed to belong in Malpighiaceae. Kew’s isotype had a leaf of Malpighiaceae (likely
Mascagnia cordifolia
) stored in the fragment capsule, which was sampled and sequenced instead of the actual leaves of
K. brasiliensis
. Recently published studies have settled the placement of
Keraunea
in Ehretiaceae (Boraginales) and proposed three additional species.
Conclusions
– DNA sequences can be helpful in classifying taxa when morphology is conflicting or of a doubtful interpretation, with molecular phylogenetic placement being established as a popular tool accelerating the discovery of systematic relationships. Nonetheless, molecular techniques are also susceptible to methodological mistakes, which necessitates building a solid foundation of plant morphology and taxonomy to avoid artefacts in phylogenetic studies. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 |
ISSN: | 2032-3913 2032-3921 |
DOI: | 10.5091/plecevo.101135 |