AI Article Synopsis

  • Morning glories, particularly the genus Ipomoea, are not monophyletic, indicating that multiple genera evolved from it, which has led to focused systematic research on the monophyletic tribe Ipomoeeae consisting of 650-900 species.
  • The study sequenced whole plastomes from 29 morning glory species and used that data to estimate phylogenetic relationships and divergence times, alongside analyzing traits like root architecture and flower color.
  • The findings confirm strong support for phylogenetic relationships among Ipomoeeae, suggest a late Eocene divergence, and reveal that the common ancestor had unique traits, contributing valuable insight into the evolution and ecology of morning glories.

Article Abstract

Premise Of The Study: Morning glories are an emerging model system, and resolving phylogenetic relationships is critical for understanding their evolution. Phylogenetic studies demonstrated that the largest morning glory genus, Ipomoea, is not monophyletic, and nine other genera are derived from within Ipomoea. Therefore, systematic research is focused on the monophyletic tribe Ipomoeeae (ca. 650-900 species). We used whole plastomes to infer relationships across Ipomoeeae.

Methods: Whole plastomes were sequenced for 29 morning glory species, representing major lineages. Phylogenies were estimated using alignments of 82 plastid genes and whole plastomes. Divergence times were estimated using three fossil calibration points. Finally, evolution of root architecture, flower color, and ergot alkaloid presence was examined.

Key Results: Phylogenies estimated from both data sets had nearly identical topologies. Phylogenetic results are generally consistent with prior phylogenetic hypotheses. Higher-level relationships with weak support in previous studies were recovered here with strong support. Molecular dating analysis suggests a late Eocene divergence time for the Ipomoeeae. The two clades within the tribe, Argyreiinae and Astripomoeinae, diversified at similar times. Reconstructed most recent common ancestor of the Ipomoeeae had blue flowers, an association with ergot-producing fungi, and either tuberous or fibrous roots.

Conclusions: Phylogenetic results provide confidence in relationships among Ipomoeeae lineages. Divergence time estimation results provide a temporal context for diversification of morning glories. Ancestral character reconstructions support previous findings that morning glory morphology is evolutionarily labile. Taken together, our study provides strong resolution of the morning glory phylogeny, which is broadly applicable to the evolution and ecology of these fascinating species.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1300207DOI Listing

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