Publications by authors named "Gwynne Lim"

Article Synopsis
  • Phylogenomic studies of mycoheterotrophic plants, which depend on fungi for nutrients, show that their plastomes evolve rapidly and often undergo significant genome reduction, making them interesting for understanding phylogenomic inference.
  • Using various analytical methods on protein-coding gene sets from previously published and newly sequenced plastomes, researchers successfully determined the phylogenetic relationships of mycoheterotrophic taxa from ten angiosperm families.
  • Despite challenges like high mutation rates and gene loss, likelihood-based analyses yielded strong support for the phylogenetic placements of these plants, aligning with previous studies and confirming patterns of photosynthesis loss in several families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Premise Of The Study: Heterotrophic angiosperms tend to have reduced plastome sizes relative to those of their autotrophic relatives because genes that code for proteins involved in photosynthesis are lost. However, some plastid-encoded proteins may have vital nonphotosynthetic functions, and the plastome therefore may be retained after the loss of photosynthesis.

Methods: We sequenced the plastome of the mycoheterotrophic species Thismia tentaculata and a representative of its sister genus, Tacca chantrieri, using next-generation technology, and we compared sequences and structures of genes and genomes of these species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite progress based on multilocus, phylogenetic studies of the palms (order Arecales, family Arecaceae), uncertainty remains in resolution/support among major clades and for the placement of the palms among the commelinid monocots. Palms and related commelinids represent a classic case of substitution rate heterogeneity that has not been investigated in the genomic era. To address questions of relationships, support and rate variation among palms and commelinid relatives, 39 plastomes representing the palms and related family Dasypogonaceae were generated via genome skimming and integrated within a monocot-wide matrix for phylogenetic and molecular evolutionary analyses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We use two episodes from systematic history to illustrate how conflict between immature and adult data was important for the development of phylogenetic systematics. A reference search in Zoological Record reveals that most phylogenetic analyses of endopterygote insects continue to utilize morphological rather than DNA sequence data. However, the use of immature and adult data is established for only a few taxa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF