9 research outputs found
Molecular phylogenetics and character evolution of the >sacaca> clade: Novel relationships of Croton section Cleodora (Euphorbiaceae)
Phylogenetic relationships of Croton section Cleodora (Klotzsch) Baill. were evaluated using the nuclear ribosomal ITS and the chloroplast trnL-F and trnH-psbA regions. Our results show a strongly supported clade containing most previously recognized section Cleodora species, plus some other species morphologically similar to them. Two morphological synapomorphies that support section Cleodora as a clade include pistillate flowers in which the sepals overlap to some degree, and styles that are connate at the base to varying degrees. The evolution of vegetative and floral characters that have previously been relied on for taxonomic decisions within this group are evaluated in light of the phylogenetic hypotheses. Within section Cleodora there are two well-supported clades, which are proposed here as subsections (subsection Sphaerogyni and subsection Spruceani). The resulting phylogenetic hypothesis identifies the closest relatives of the medicinally important and essential oil-rich Croton cajucara Benth. as candidates for future screening in phytochemical and pharmacological studies. © 2011 Elsevier Inc.This paper is part of the senior author’s Ph.D. dissertation in the
Department of Botany of the Biosciences Institute of the University
of São Paulo (USP). Thanks are due to the National Council of
Research of Brazil (CNPq), the International Association for Plant
Taxonomy (IAPT), a Cuatrecasas Award from the Smithsonian
Institution for the financial support provided to M.B.R.C., and the
National Science Foundation for Grants DEB-0212481 and DEB-
0508725.Peer Reviewe
Force of habit: shrubs, trees, and contingent evolution of wood anatomical diversity using Croton (Euphorbiaceae) as a model system
Background and Aims Wood is a major innovation of land plants, and is usually a central component of the
body plan for two major plant habits: shrubs and trees. Wood anatomical syndromes vary between shrubs and trees,
but no prior work has explicitly evaluated the contingent evolution of wood anatomical diversity in the context of
these plant habits.
Methods Phylogenetic comparative methods were used to test for contingent evolution of habit, habitat and wood
anatomy in the mega-diverse genus Croton (Euphorbiaceae), across the largest and most complete molecular phylogeny
of the genus to date.
Key Results Plant habit and habitat are highly correlated, but most wood anatomical features correlate more
strongly with habit. The ancestral Croton was reconstructed as a tree, the wood of which is inferred to have absent
or indistinct growth rings, confluent-like axial parenchyma, procumbent ray cells and disjunctive ray parenchyma
cell walls. The taxa sampled showed multiple independent origins of the shrub habit in Croton, and this habit shift
is contingent on several wood anatomical features (e.g. similar vessel-ray pits, thick fibre walls, perforated ray
cells). The only wood anatomical trait correlated with habitat and not habit was the presence of helical thickenings
in the vessel elements of mesic Croton.
Conclusions Plant functional traits, individually or in suites, are responses to multiple and often confounding contexts
in evolution. By establishing an explicit contingent evolutionary framework, the interplay between habit, habitat
and wood anatomical diversity was dissected in the genus Croton. Both habit and habitat influence the evolution
of wood anatomical characters, and conversely, the wood anatomy of lineages can affect shifts in plant habit and
habitat. This study hypothesizes novel putatively functional trait associations in woody plant structure that could be
further tested in a variety of other taxa.Peer Reviewe
Phylogenetics and the evolution of major structural characters in the giant genus Euphorbia L. (Euphorbiaceae)
Euphorbia is among the largest genera of angiosperms, with about 2000 species that are renowned for their remarkably diverse growth forms. To clarify phylogenetic relationships in the genus, we used maximum likelihood, Bayesian, and parsimony analyses of DNA sequence data from 10 markers representing all three plant genomes, averaging more than 16. kbp for each accession. Taxon sampling included 176 representatives from Euphorbioideae (including 161 of Euphorbia). Analyses of these data robustly resolve a backbone topology of four major, subgeneric clades- Esula, Rhizanthium, Euphorbia, and Chamaesyce-that are successively sister lineages. Ancestral state reconstructions of six reproductive and growth form characters indicate that the earliest Euphorbia species were likely woody, non-succulent plants with helically arranged leaves and 5-glanded cyathia in terminal inflorescences. The highly modified growth forms and reproductive features in Euphorbia have independent origins within the subgeneric clades. Examples of extreme parallelism in trait evolution include at least 14 origins of xeromorphic growth forms and at least 13 origins of seed caruncles. The evolution of growth form and inflorescence position are significantly correlated, and a pathway of evolutionary transitions is supported that has implications for the evolution of Euphorbia xerophytes of large stature. Such xerophytes total more than 400 species and are dominants of vegetation types throughout much of arid Africa and Madagascar. © 2012.Support for this study came
from a National Science Foundation PBI Grant (DEB 0616533)
and the Smithsonian Institution.Peer Reviewe
Electroweak measurements in electron–positron collisions at w-boson-pair energies at lep
Contains fulltext :
121524.pdf (preprint version ) (Open Access
Search for Charged Higgs bosons: Combined Results Using LEP Data
The four LEP collaborations, ALEPH, DELPHI, L3 and OPAL, have searched for pair-produced charged Higgs bosons in the framework of Two Higgs Doublet Models (2HDMs). The data of the four experiments are statistically combined. The results are interpreted within the 2HDM for Type I and Type II benchmark scenarios. No statistically significant excess has been observed when compared to the Standard Model background prediction, and the combined LEP data exclude large regions of the model parameter space. Charged Higgs bosons with mass below 80 GeV/c^2 (Type II scenario) or 72.5 GeV/c^2 (Type I scenario, for pseudo-scalar masses above 12 GeV/c^2) are excluded at the 95% confidence level