Journal article
Neo- and Paleopolyploidy contribute to the species diversity of Asplenium—the most species-rich genus of ferns
H Schneider, HM Liu, YF Chang, D Ohlsen, LR Perrie, L Shepherd, M Kessler, DN Karger, S Hennequin, J Marquardt, S Russell, S Ansell, NT Lu, P Kamau, J Lóriga, L Regalado, J Heinrichs, A Ebihara, AR Smith, M Gibby
Journal of Systematics and Evolution | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1111/jse.12271
Abstract
Polyploidy is widely considered as a major process in the evolution of plants but the accumulation of polyploid species diversity is still controversial. Some recent studies proposed increased extinction risk in neopolyploids compared with their diploid ancestors. The high proportion of polyploid ferns is expected to be formed mainly by neopolyploids, whereas paleopolyploid species are predicted to be clustered in clades founded by whole genome duplications. Here, we test this prediction by exploring the evolution of polyploidy in the derived fern family Aspleniaceae. The family has a global distribution and shows the highest frequency of polyploid taxa among all ferns. To test the hypothesi..
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