Ni hyper-accumulation: Difference between revisions

From OpenWetWare
Jump to navigationJump to search
(New page: Molecular phylogenetics of the plant genus Garrya (Garryaceae) The genus Garrya Dougl. ex Lindl. (Garryaceae) contains around 15 species of wind-pollinated, dioecious, evergreen trees an...)
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Molecular phylogenetics of the plant genus Garrya (Garryaceae)  
[[Image:|thumb|left|Garrya fremontii]]
'''Molecular phylogenetics of the plant genus ''Garrya'' (Garryaceae)'''


The genus Garrya Dougl. ex Lindl. (Garryaceae) contains around 15 species of wind-pollinated, dioecious, evergreen trees and shrubs distributed in North America, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean (Dahling 1978). The species are separated into two sub-genera, Garrya and Fadyenia, which differ in morphology and distribution (Dahling 1978). The precise phylogenetic position of the genus Garrya, and its Asian sister genus, Aucuba, has only recently become clear, following decades of uncertainty (Bremer et al. 2002), and the status of many species and sub-specific taxa within the genus remains uncertain, owing to a paucity of informative morphological features, high rates of intraspecific variation, and hybridization between species (Dahling 1978). My research on Garrya makes use of molecular phylogenetic data to test taxonomic hypotheses within the genus, examine the evolution of morphology, and reconstruct the geographic history of this intriguing group of plants.  
The genus ''Garrya'' Dougl. ex Lindl. (Garryaceae) contains around 15 species of wind-pollinated, dioecious, evergreen trees and shrubs distributed in North America, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean (Dahling 1978). The species are separated into two sub-genera, ''Garrya'' and ''Fadyenia'', which differ in morphology and distribution (Dahling 1978). The precise phylogenetic position of the genus ''Garrya'', and its Asian sister genus, ''Aucuba'', has only recently become clear, following decades of uncertainty (Bremer et al. 2002), and the status of many species and sub-specific taxa within the genus remains uncertain, owing to a paucity of informative morphological features, high rates of intraspecific variation, and hybridization between species (Dahling 1978). My research on ''Garrya'' makes use of molecular phylogenetic data to test taxonomic hypotheses within the genus, examine the evolution of morphology, and reconstruct the geographic history of this intriguing group of plants.




References Cited:  
'''References Cited:'''


Bremer, B. et al. 2002. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 24: 274-301.  
Bremer, B. et al. 2002. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 24: 274-301.


Dahling, G.V. 1978. Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University 209: 1-104.  
Dahling, G.V. 1978. Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University 209: 1-104.
 
Retrieved from "http://openwetware.org/wiki/Garrya_%28Garryaceae%29"

Revision as of 13:58, 10 October 2008

[[Image:|thumb|left|Garrya fremontii]] Molecular phylogenetics of the plant genus Garrya (Garryaceae)

The genus Garrya Dougl. ex Lindl. (Garryaceae) contains around 15 species of wind-pollinated, dioecious, evergreen trees and shrubs distributed in North America, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean (Dahling 1978). The species are separated into two sub-genera, Garrya and Fadyenia, which differ in morphology and distribution (Dahling 1978). The precise phylogenetic position of the genus Garrya, and its Asian sister genus, Aucuba, has only recently become clear, following decades of uncertainty (Bremer et al. 2002), and the status of many species and sub-specific taxa within the genus remains uncertain, owing to a paucity of informative morphological features, high rates of intraspecific variation, and hybridization between species (Dahling 1978). My research on Garrya makes use of molecular phylogenetic data to test taxonomic hypotheses within the genus, examine the evolution of morphology, and reconstruct the geographic history of this intriguing group of plants.


References Cited:

Bremer, B. et al. 2002. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 24: 274-301.

Dahling, G.V. 1978. Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University 209: 1-104.