2004
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.91.3.474
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Patterns of evolution in western North American Mimulus (Phrymaceae)

Abstract: A well-supported phylogeny is presented from both chloroplast DNA (the trnL/F region) and two regions of nuclear rDNA (ITS [internal transcribed spacer] and ETS [external transcribed spacer]) with nearly complete sampling for Mimulus (Phrymaceae) in western North America. Three separate genera are derived from within the clade that contains all the Mimulus species in western North America. The taxonomic status of the proposed sections of Mimulus and the relationships of many taxonomically difficult species are… Show more

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Cited by 117 publications
(161 citation statements)
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“…In this case, the lower chromosome numbers of Erythranthe would be secondarily derived by descending aneuploidy and homoplasic with the other n ¼ 8 taxa. However, analyses of expressed sequence tag libraries from M. lewisii and M. guttatus indicate that these taxa share a most recent whole-genome duplication event about 46-70 Mya (Clarke, 2012), which pre-dates the estimated origins of both the genus Mimulus (35 Mya) and the family Phrymaceae (40 Mya) (Beardsley et al, 2004;Nie et al, 2006). It is also theoretically possible that Paradanthus and Simiolus retain ancestral high chromosome numbers from this ancient polyploidization, and that all Mimulus clades with lower chromosome numbers Figure 1 Synteny between concatenated M. guttatus (GIM 1-14; colors) and M. lewisii (LPC 1 þ 8-7; black) linkage maps.…”
Section: Synteny Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this case, the lower chromosome numbers of Erythranthe would be secondarily derived by descending aneuploidy and homoplasic with the other n ¼ 8 taxa. However, analyses of expressed sequence tag libraries from M. lewisii and M. guttatus indicate that these taxa share a most recent whole-genome duplication event about 46-70 Mya (Clarke, 2012), which pre-dates the estimated origins of both the genus Mimulus (35 Mya) and the family Phrymaceae (40 Mya) (Beardsley et al, 2004;Nie et al, 2006). It is also theoretically possible that Paradanthus and Simiolus retain ancestral high chromosome numbers from this ancient polyploidization, and that all Mimulus clades with lower chromosome numbers Figure 1 Synteny between concatenated M. guttatus (GIM 1-14; colors) and M. lewisii (LPC 1 þ 8-7; black) linkage maps.…”
Section: Synteny Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chromosome number evolution in monkeyflowers L Fishman et al have separately undergone reduction in chromosome number by fusion (in a minimum of four distinct lineages; Beardsley et al, 2004). In this case, the eight haploid chromosomes of Erythranthe taxa would result from recent (o20 Mya) fusion, and would again not correspond to the chromosomes of other low-number taxa.…”
Section: Synteny Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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