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<bibtex:entry id="Meudt2009">
  <bibtex:article>
    <bibtex:author>Meudt&#44; H. and Lockhart&#44; P. and Bryant&#44; D.</bibtex:author>

    <bibtex:title>Species delimitation and phylogeny of a New Zealand plant species radiation</bibtex:title>

    <bibtex:journal>BMC Evolutionary Biology</bibtex:journal>

    <bibtex:year>2009</bibtex:year>
    <bibtex:volume>9</bibtex:volume>
    <bibtex:month>May</bibtex:month>

    <bibtex:pages>111</bibtex:pages>








    <bibtex:abstract>Background&#13;&#10;Delimiting species boundaries and reconstructing the evolutionary relationships of late Tertiary and Quaternary species radiations is difficult. One recent approach emphasizes the use of genome&#45;wide molecular markers&#44; such as amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLPs) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)&#44; to identify distinct metapopulation lineages as taxonomic species. Here we investigate the properties of AFLP data&#44; and the usefulness of tree&#45;based and non&#45;tree&#45;based clustering methods to delimit species and reconstruct evolutionary relationships among high&#45;elevation Ourisia species (Plantaginaceae) in the New Zealand archipelago.&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Results&#13;&#10;New Zealand Ourisia are shown to comprise a geologically recent species radiation based on molecular dating analyses of ITS sequences (0.4&#8211;1.3 MY). Supernetwork analyses indicate that separate tree&#45;based clustering analyses of four independent AFLP primer combinations and 193 individuals of Ourisia produced similar trees. When combined and analysed using tree building methods&#44; 15 distinct metapopulations could be identified. These clusters corresponded very closely to species and subspecies identified on the basis of diagnostic morphological characters. In contrast&#44; Structure and PCO&#45;MC analyses of the same data identified a maximum of 12 and 8 metapopulations&#44; respectively. All approaches resolved a large&#45;leaved group and a small&#45;leaved group&#44; as well as a lineage of three alpine species within the small&#45;leaved group. We were unable to further resolve relationships within these groups as corrected and uncorrected distances derived from AFLP profiles had limited tree&#45;like properties.&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Conclusion&#13;&#10;Ourisia radiated into a range of alpine and subalpine habitats in New Zealand during the Pleistocene&#44; resulting in 13 morphologically and ecologically distinct species&#44; including one reinstated from subspecies rank. Analyses of AFLP identified distinct metapopulations consistent with morphological characters allowing species boundaries to be delimited in Ourisia. Importantly&#44; Structure analyses suggest some degree of admixture with most species&#44; which may also explain why the AFLP data do not exhibit sufficient tree&#45;like properties necessary for reconstructing some species relationships. We discuss this feature and highlight the importance of improving models for phylogenetic analyses of species radiations using AFLP and SNP data.&#13;&#10;</bibtex:abstract>
    <bibtex:url>http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471&#45;2148/9/111</bibtex:url>






    <bibtex:keywords>from:davidjamesbryant sys:relevantFor:compevol</bibtex:keywords>



  </bibtex:article>
</bibtex:entry>
</bibtex:file>

