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Resolving relationships in an exceedingly young Neotropical orchid lineage using Genotyping-by-sequencing data

dc.creatorPérez Escobar, Oscar Alejandro
dc.creatorBogarín Chaves, Diego Gerardo
dc.creatorSchley, Rowan John
dc.creatorBateman, Richard M.
dc.creatorGerlach, Günter
dc.creatorHarpke, Dörte
dc.creatorBrassac, Jonathan
dc.creatorFernández Mazuecos, Mario
dc.creatorDodsworth, Steven
dc.creatorHágsater, Eric
dc.creatorBlanco Coto, Mario Alberto
dc.creatorGottschling, Marc
dc.creatorBlattner, Frank R.
dc.date.accessioned2021-11-02T17:16:03Z
dc.date.available2021-11-02T17:16:03Z
dc.date.issued2020-03-01
dc.description.abstractPoor morphological and molecular differentiation in recently diversified lineages is a widespread phenomenon in plants. Phylogenetic relationships within such species complexes are often difficult to resolve because of the low variability in traditional molecular loci. Furthermore, biological phenomena responsible for topological incongruence such as Incomplete Lineage Sorting (ILS) and hybridisation complicate the resolution of phylogenetic relationships among closely related taxa. In this study, we employ a Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) approach to disentangle evolutionary relationships within a species complex belonging to the Neotropical orchid genus Cycnoches. This complex includes seven taxa distributed through Central America and the Colombian Chocó, and is nested within a clade estimated to have first diversified in the early Quaternary. Previous phylogenies inferred from few loci failed to provide support for internal relationships within the complex. Our Neighbour-net and coalescent-based analyses inferred from ca. 13,000 GBS loci obtained from 31 individuals belonging to six of the seven traditionally accepted Cycnoches taxa provided a robust phylogeny for this group. The genus Cycnoches includes three main clades that are further supported by morphological traits and geographic distributions. Similarly, a topology reconstructed through maximum likelihood (ML) inference of concatenated GBS loci produced results that are comparable with those reconstructed through coalescence and network-based methods. Our comparative phylogenetic informativeness analyses suggest that the low support evident in the ML phylogeny might be attributed to the abundance of uninformative GBS loci, which can account for up to 50% of the total number of loci recovered. The phylogenomic framework provided here, as well as morphological evidence and geographical patterns, suggest that the six entities previously thought to be different species or subspecies might actually represent only three distinct segregates. We further discuss the limited phylogenetic informativeness found in our GBS approach and its utility to disentangle relationships within recent and rapidly evolving species complexes. Our study is the first to demonstrate the utility of GBS data to reconstruct relationships within young (~2 Ma) Neotropical plant clades, opening new avenues for studies of species complexes that populate the species-rich orchid familyes_ES
dc.description.procedenceUCR::Vicerrectoría de Investigación::Unidades de Investigación::Ciencias Básicas::Jardín Botánico Lankester (JBL)es_ES
dc.identifier.citationhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1055790318307139
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.ympev.2019.106672
dc.identifier.issn1055-7903
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10669/85016
dc.language.isoenges_ES
dc.rightsacceso embargado
dc.sourceMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution144es_ES
dc.subjectAmerican tropicses_ES
dc.subjectHigh-throughput sequencinges_ES
dc.subjectOrchidaceaees_ES
dc.subjectPhylogenetic incongruencees_ES
dc.subjectRapid diversificationes_ES
dc.titleResolving relationships in an exceedingly young Neotropical orchid lineage using Genotyping-by-sequencing dataes_ES
dc.typeartículo original

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