| Abstract Detail
Systematics Chan, Patricia [1], Lemmon, Emily [2], Lemmon, Alan [3], Barrett, Matthew [4], Givnish, Thomas [5]. Molecular phylogenomics, historical biogeography, floral evolution, gene flow, and species diversification in Darwinia (Myrtaceae). Darwinia (Myrtaceae) includes ca. 65 shrubby species restricted to the ancient, highly infertile landforms of Western Australia, many with exceptionally narrow geographic ranges, highly divergent inflorescences seemingly adapted to insect, bird, or marsupial pollination, and hints of short-distance seed dispersal by ants or gravity. Darwinia thus provides an ideal system with which to evaluate the relative roles of several factors – limited dispersal, topographic and edaphic diversity, and plant-pollinator coevolution – in driving species diversification. Previous analyses based on nuclear DNA sequences produced a poorly resolved phylogeny with many unres¬olved or unsupported nodes, indicating the need for more powerful data for studying Darwinia evolution. I am currently working on the phylogeny, historical biogeography, floral evolution, spatial scale of gene flow, and apparent drivers of species diversification in Darwinia, based on sequencing and analyzing whole plastomes and hundreds of single-copy nuclear genes, together with pollination studies and population genomic analyses.
1 - University Of Wisconsin Madison, Botany, Birge Hall, Madison, WI, 53703, United States 2 - Florida State University, Biological Science, 213 Biomedical Research Facility, Tallahasee, FL 3 - Florida State University, Biological Science, 400 Dirac Science Library, Tallahasee, FL, 32306, USA 4 - James Cook University, Australian Tropical Herbarium, McGregor Rd, Smithfiled, QLD, 4878, Australia 5 - University Of Wisconsin-Madison, Department Of Botany, 315 Birge Hall, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI, 53706, United States
Keywords: systematics Evolution ecology phylogenomics Darwinia Myrtaceae Myrtales Historical biogeography target-capture population genetics Pollination syndromes sky island Inflorescence Floral morphology gene flow Australia Southwest Australia floristic province plastome seed dispersal.
Presentation Type: Poster Number: PSY010 Abstract ID:965 Candidate for Awards:None |