AI Article Synopsis

  • Oceanic islands are valuable for studying plant ecology and evolution, particularly through cases like Callicarpa glabra, Callicarpa parvifolia, and Callicarpa subpubescens, which are native to the Ogasawara Islands.
  • These species exemplify evolutionary changes such as adaptive radiation and dioecious sex expression, making them ideal candidates for understanding genetic relationships and colonization processes.
  • Phylogenomic analysis revealed that these species share a common ancestor with East Asian plants, having diverged about three million years ago, likely due to long-distance dispersal from East Asia followed by speciation on the islands.

Article Abstract

Oceanic islands offer excellent opportunities to study the ecology, evolutionary biology, and biogeography of plants. To uncover the genetic basis of various evolutionary trends commonly observed on these islands, the origins and phylogenetic relationships of the species being studied should be understood. Callicarpa glabra, Callicarpa parvifolia, and Callicarpa subpubescens are evergreen woody plants endemic to the Ogasawara Islands, which are remote oceanic islands located off of the Japanese Archipelago. These species are ideal for studying evolutionary changes on oceanic islands because of their adaptive radiation and shift toward dioecious sex expression. We used a phylogenomic perspective to determine the evolutionary relationship of the three species within the genus and infer their colonization time. Based on the analysis of both chloroplast genomes and 86 nuclear single-copy genes, we found that these three species were monophyletic and embedded in a backbone clade that included multiple East Asian species. The phylogenetic tree based on over 10,000 nuclear genes placed the insular species in the East Asian clade, although the topology did not entirely correspond to the chloroplast tree, probably because of incomplete lineage sorting and interspecific hybridization. The three endemic species were estimated to have diverged from continental species approximately three million years ago (Mya). The results of this study suggested that the ancestor of the Ogasawara endemic species originated from long-distance dispersal from East Asia mainland in the late Pliocene, and then progressively speciated within the islands.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108234DOI Listing

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