4.4 Article

DIVERSIFICATION OF CEANOTHUS (RHAMNACEAE) IN THE CALIFORNIA FLORISTIC PROVINCE

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCES
Volume 172, Issue 9, Pages 1137-1164

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/662028

Keywords

Ceanothus; California; divergence time; fossil; nitrate reductase; rbcL; trnL-F

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Funding

  1. American Society of Plant Taxonomists
  2. Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation
  3. Lawrence R. Heckard Endowment Fund of the Jepson Herbarium
  4. National Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF 000457253]

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High diversity and endemism in the California Floristic Province (CFP) are an alleged response to the late Cenozoic advent of Mediterranean-type climate in this region. Ceanothus comprises two divergent subgenera with centers of diversity in the CFP. We reconstruct the evolution of Ceanothus by using DNA sequence data from the nuclear gene nitrate reductase. We find that the timing of diversification events is related to geological and climatic history. In both subgenera, diversification is characterized by recent divergence of extant taxa and geographically structured phylogenetic relationships. A strong north-south divergence of subgenus Cerastes across the Transverse Ranges indicates that phylogenetic relationships may be structured by climatically divergent regions of the CFP. Divergence-time estimation suggests that the age of extant diversification in both subgenera is; 6 Ma. This agrees with the fossil record but predates the hypothesized Quaternary (2-Ma) origin of Mediterranean-type climate in the region.

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