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Chloroplast DNA and the determination of species status in the Disa tripetaloides complex (Orchidaceae), and its relationships to three species Racemosae, section Disa
Authors:Linda T Parker  Harold Koopowitz
Institution:

a Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, Shrewsbury, MA 01545, USA

b Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA 92717, U.S.A.

Abstract:Disa cardinalis and three populations within the D. tripetaloides species complex contain variation in their chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) variability. All four taxa possessed unique cpDNAs and sequence divergence values ranged from 0.34 to 1.03%. A phylogeny of these genomes was reconstructed, along with the genomes of three other species, D. racemosa, D. uniflora and D. venosa, all of which are also section Disa and series RAcemosae, to determine the relationship of these closely related species to the D. tripetaloides complex. A phylogeny of the taxa using morphological data was also reconstructed. Outgroup comparison was made with D. sagittalis, a member of section Coryphaea. Although the molecular and morphological data were not completely congruent, both data types revealed D. cardinalis, rather than D. tripetaloides ssp. aurata, to be more closely allied with D. tripetaloides ssp. tripetaloides, suggesting that D. tripetaloides ssp. aurata should be elevated to species rank. Additionally, the high sequence divergence observed between the Natal and Cape populations, coupled with their geographical isolation and alternate flowering seasons, suggests that these two D. tripetaloides ssp. tripetaloides populations may, in fact, be more appropriately ranked as subspecies.
Keywords:Disa  Orchidaceae  cpDNA  phylogenetic analysis  taxonomy
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