A new, disjunct species of Bahiana (Euphorbiaceae-Acalyphoideae): Phytogeographic connections between the seasonally dry tropical forests of Peru and Brazil, and a review of spinescence in the family
Data files
Jan 20, 2023 version files 615.56 KB
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README.md
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Wurdack_Bahiana2gene_Dryad.nex
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Wurdack_Bahiana4gene1.1_Dryad.nex
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Abstract
Bahiana is expanded from 1 to 2 species with the description of B. occidentalis K. Wurdack, sp. nov. as a new endemic of the seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTFs) of Peru. The disjunct distribution of Bahiana with populations of B. occidentalis on opposite sides of the Andes in northwestern Peru (Tumbes, San Martín) and B. pyriformis in eastern Brazil (Bahia) adds to the phytogeographic links among the widely scattered New World SDTFs. Although B. occidentalis remains imperfectly known due to lack of flowering collections, molecular phylogenetic results from four loci (plastid matK, rbcL, and trnL-F; and nuclear ITS) unite the two species as does gross vegetative morphology, notably their spinose stipules, and androecial structure. Spinescence in Euphorbiaceae was surveyed and found on vegetative organs in 25 genera, which mostly have modified sharp branch tips. Among New World taxa, spines that originate from stipule modifications only occur in Bahiana and Acidocroton, while the intrastipular spines of Philyra are of uncertain homologies.
Datasets derive from fluorescent Sanger sequencing on an ABI 3730xl DNA Analyzer. The reads were assembled with Sequencher v5.2.4 and consensus sequences were manually inserted into the multiple sequence alignments (MSAs) of Carrión et al. (2022), followed by alignment refinements based on a sequence similarity criterion.
Data files are text documents that can be opened in any text editor. Commands are designed to be executed in PAUP*, and matrix derivatives then analyzed with other phylogenetic analysis programs.