Molecular phylogenies disprove a hypothesized C4 reversion in Eragrostis walteri (Poaceae) |
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Authors: | Ingram Amanda L Christin Pascal-Antoine Osborne Colin P |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, IN 47933, USA. ingrama@wabash.edu |
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Abstract: | Background and AimsThe main assemblage of the grass subfamily Chloridoideae is the largest known clade of C4 plant species, with the notable exception of Eragrostis walteri Pilg., whose leaf anatomy has been described as typical of C3 plants. Eragrostis walteri is therefore classically hypothesized to represent an exceptional example of evolutionary reversion from C4 to C3 photosynthesis. Here this hypothesis is tested by verifying the photosynthetic type of E. walteri and its classification.MethodsCarbon isotope analyses were used to determine the photosynthetic pathway of several E. walteri accessions, and phylogenetic analyses of plastid rbcL and ndhF and nuclear internal transcribed spacer DNA sequences were used to establish the phylogenetic position of the species.ResultsCarbon isotope analyses confirmed that E. walteri is a C3 plant. However, phylogenetic analyses demonstrate that this species has been misclassified, showing that E. walteri is positioned outside Chloridoideae in Arundinoideae, a subfamily comprised entirely of C3 species.ConclusionsThe long-standing hypothesis of C4 to C3 reversion in E. walteri is rejected, and the classification of this species needs to be re-evaluated. |
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Keywords: | C4 photosynthesis evolution reversion Eragrostis Chloridoideae Arundinoideae Poaceae Africa Namibia |
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