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Population and phylogenomic decomposition via genotyping‐by‐sequencing in Australian Pelargonium
Authors:Adrienne B Nicotra  Caroline Chong  Jason G Bragg  Chong Ren Ong  Nicola C Aitken  Aaron Chuah  Brendan Lepschi  Justin O Borevitz
Institution:1. Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA;3. Genome Discovery Unit, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia;4. Australian National Herbarium, Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research, Canberra, ACT, Australia;5. Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Australian National University, ACT, Australia
Abstract:Species delimitation has seen a paradigm shift as increasing accessibility of genomic‐scale data enables separation of lineages with convergent morphological traits and the merging of recently diverged ecotypes that have distinguishing characteristics. We inferred the process of lineage formation among Australian species in the widespread and highly variable genus Pelargonium by combining phylogenomic and population genomic analyses along with breeding system studies and character analysis. Phylogenomic analysis and population genetic clustering supported seven of the eight currently described species but provided little evidence for differences in genetic structure within the most widely distributed group that containing P. australe. In contrast, morphometric analysis detected three deep lineages within Australian Pelargonium; with P. australe consisting of five previously unrecognized entities occupying separate geographic ranges. The genomic approach enabled elucidation of parallel evolution in some traits formerly used to delineate species, as well as identification of ecotypic morphological differentiation within recognized species. Highly variable morphology and trait convergence each contribute to the discordance between phylogenomic relationships and morphological taxonomy. Data suggest that genetic divergence among species within the Australian Pelargonium may result from allopatric speciation while morphological differentiation within and among species may be more strongly driven by environmental differences.
Keywords:genotyping‐by‐sequencing  morphometrics     Pelargonium     phylogenomic  population genomics  reproductive isolation  speciation
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