Taxa in the Banksia spinulosa Sm. complex (Proteaceae) have populations with sympatric, parapatric and allopatric distributions and unclear or disputed boundaries. Our hypothesis is that under biological, phenetic and diagnosable species concepts that each of the currently named taxa within the Banksia spinulosa complex is a separate species. Based on specimens collected as part of this study, and data recorded from specimens in six Australian herbaria, complemented by phenetic analysis (semi-strong multidimensional scaling and UPGMA clustering) and a detailed morphological study, we investigated both morphological variation and geographic distribution in the Banksia spinulosa complex. All specimens used for this study are held at the N.C.W. Beadle Herbarium or the National Herbarium of New South Wales. In total 23 morphological characters (11 quantitative, five binary, and seven multistate characters) were analysed phenetically for 89 specimens. Ordination and cluster analysis resulted in individuals grouping strongly allowing recognition of distinct groups consistent with their recognition as separate species. Additional morphological analysis was completed on all specimens using leaf, floral, fruit and stem morphology, providing clear cut diagnosable groups and strong support for the recognition of Banksia spinulosa var. cunninghamii and Banksia spinulosa var. neoanglica as species.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492926PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.14.3415DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding evolutionary history and the classification of organisms is challenging and hampers biodiversity documentation and conservation efforts, although high-throughput sequencing is helping clarify these issues.
  • The study reveals that the Banksia spinulosa s.l. group actually contains two clades with distinct genetic structures, contradicting current taxonomic classifications and suggesting certain species should not be recognized.
  • The findings highlight that morphological diversity may not accurately reflect evolutionary relationships, and overestimating species diversity can lead to misguided conservation priorities.
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The cylindrical conflorescences of the Banksia spinulosa Sm complex have several different colour types, i.e., black, red, maroon, lemon, and yellow.

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Taxa in the Banksia spinulosa Sm. complex (Proteaceae) have populations with sympatric, parapatric and allopatric distributions and unclear or disputed boundaries. Our hypothesis is that under biological, phenetic and diagnosable species concepts that each of the currently named taxa within the Banksia spinulosa complex is a separate species.

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The accumulation of genetic diversity within a canopy-stored seed bank.

Mol Ecol

July 2010

School of Biological Sciences, Institute for Conservation Biology, University of Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.

Many plants regenerate after fire from a canopy-stored seed bank, in which seed are housed in fire resistant confructescences (cones) that remain on maternal plants. This strategy would be favoured if plants accumulate a sufficiently large and genetically diverse seed bank during interfire intervals. We use a 16-year demographic study and surveys of microsatellite variation to quantify and explain the rate of accumulation of genetic diversity within the canopy seed bank of the shrub Banksia spinulosa.

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