The American Journal of Botany, June 2000 v87
i6 pS164
Tracing the origin of the Macaronesian endemic genus Bystropogon (Lamiaceae). JENNIFER
L. TRUSTY; DAVID J. BOGLER; ARNOLDO SANTOS-GUERRA; RICHARD G. OLMSTEAD; JAVIER
FRANCISCO-ORTEGA.
Author's Abstract: COPYRIGHT 2000 Botanical Society of America, Inc.
Attempts to trace the origin of organisms
on islands is frustrated by the major morphological changes that often
occur following long distance dispersal and speciation. The Canary
Islands exemplify how island environments influence speciation.
The unique flora of the Canary Islands includes approximatedly 600 endemic species with at least 23 endemic
genera that represent 40% of the native plant species of these islands. A
molecular phylogenetic study based on chloroplast and
nuclear DNA regions suggest that the ancestor of the Macaronesian
endemic genus Bystropogon (Lamiaceae)
arrived from the New World. These results provide
further molecular evidence for a floristic link between the Macaronesian Islands
and the New World previously shown in Sedum (Crassulaceae) and Pericallis (Asteraceae). Our results also provide an initial phylogeny
within the Mentheae tribe and will help to resolve
the intergeneric relationships and evolutionary
history of this tribe