AI Article Synopsis

  • Rapid evolutionary radiations, like those seen in the temperate bamboos (Arundinarieae), present complex phylogenetic challenges due to inconsistent results from different data types (e.g., morphology vs. molecular).
  • This study uses nuclear markers from ddRAD data for 213 Arundinarieae taxa and chloroplast genomes for 147 taxa, aiming to establish a clearer phylogenetic framework for this group.
  • The findings reveal five major lineages correlated with distinct rhizome morphologies, with the ddRAD tree being the most reliable representation of species relationships, highlighting a rapid diversification in the mid-Miocene linked to climatic changes in East Asia.

Article Abstract

Rapid evolutionary radiations are among the most challenging phylogenetic problems, wherein different types of data (e.g., morphology and molecular) or genetic markers (e.g., nuclear and organelle) often yield inconsistent results. The tribe Arundinarieae, that is, the temperate bamboos, is a clade of tetraploid originated 22 Ma and subsequently radiated in East Asia. Previous studies of Arundinarieae have found conflicting relationships and/or low support. Here, we obtain nuclear markers from ddRAD data for 213 Arundinarieae taxa and parallel sampling of chloroplast genomes from genome skimming for 147 taxa. We first assess the feasibility of using ddRAD-seq data for phylogenetic estimates of paleopolyploid and rapidly radiated lineages, optimize clustering thresholds, and analysis workflow for orthology identification. Reference-based ddRAD data assembly approaches perform well and yield strongly supported relationships that are generally concordant with morphology-based taxonomy. We recover five major lineages, two of which are notable (the pachymorph and leptomorph lineages), in that they correspond with distinct rhizome morphologies. By contrast, the phylogeny from chloroplast genomes differed significantly. Based on multiple lines of evidence, the ddRAD tree is favored as the best species tree estimation for temperate bamboos. Using a time-calibrated ddRAD tree, we find that Arundinarieae diversified rapidly around the mid-Miocene corresponding with intensification of the East Asian monsoon and the evolution of key innovations including the leptomorph rhizomes. Our results provide a highly resolved phylogeny of Arundinarieae, shed new light on the radiation and reticulate evolutionary history of this tribe, and provide an empirical example for the study of recalcitrant plant radiations. [Arundinarieae; ddRAD; paleopolyploid; genome skimming; rapid diversification; incongruence.].

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8208805PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syaa076DOI Listing

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