“…Geographical patterning in cpDNA markers has been reported for the Tasmanian eucalypts (McKinnon et al, 2001(McKinnon et al, , 2004, for Iberian species of Phlomis (Albaladejo et al, 2005) and for white oaks in Europe (Dumolin-Lapé-gue et al, 1997;Petit et al, 2002). In these plant groups there is mounting evidence for the presence of several haplotypes within a single species, shared among species within geographical regions, with introgression and hybridisation being invoked as the most likely cause (Dumolin-Lapégue et al, 1997;Steane et al, 1998;Fuertes Aguilar et al, 1999a;Jackson et al, 1999;McKinnon et al, 2001;Petit et al, 2002). Given that the species in the present analysis hybridise in nature (Brock and Brown, 1961;Spies et al, 1992;Visser and Spies, 1994a, b, c, d;Waters, 2007), the occurrence of several ploidy forms within a single species, haplotype sharing among species from the same area (Waters, 2007;Waters et al, 2008) and continuous variation in morphological characters among several species, geographical patterning could offer an explanation to some of the patterns evident in the plastid tree presented here (Fig.…”