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Research Article

Species delimitation in the Trichocentrum cepula (Oncidiinae, Orchidaceae) complex: a multidisciplinary approach

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Abstract

The Trichocentrum cepula complex comprises three species, T. caatingaense, T. cepula and T. sprucei, endemic to tropical forests east of the Andes in South America. The delimitation of these species has been diversely interpreted due to the extensive morphological variation in the complex. We applied an integrative approach to achieve a better understanding of these biological units, using geometric morphometrics, cytogenetic analysis (chromosome counts and CMA/DAPI banding) and molecular phylogenetics (ITS and rpl32-trnL). An initial morphometric analysis using the pre-identified specimens into three taxa suggested that T. sprucei is distinct from the other two, which show some overlap. A subsequent analysis of the labellum, including only T. caatingaense and T. cepula organized in six pseudo-populations, suggested the existence of four morphological groups. All analysed specimens presented 2n = 36 chromosomes, CMA+/DAPI terminal bands and CMA/DAPI+ pericentromeric bands, which varied in number across species, localities or even individuals from the same locality. The notable variation in DAPI+ pericentromeric bands may be related to transposable elements that could also be a factor influencing the wide morphological variation in the flowers. In the phylogenetic analysis, the specimens belonging to T. caatingaense formed a strongly supported clade sister to the rest, whereas the specimens belonging to T. cepula and T. sprucei emerged together, with their relationships tending to be determined by geographic proximity. The evidence we generated suggests that treating the Brazilian populations of this species complex under a single name, T. cepula, provides more taxonomic stability and utility, thus the necessary taxonomic changes are implemented.

Acknowledgements

We thank Marcelo Carvalho, Luciano Bianchetti, Cássio van den Berg, Erton Almeida, Carlos Souza, Izaura Socorro, Sérgio Queiroz, Jefferson Valsko, Miguel Sena de Oliveira and Adarilda Benelli for help with specimen collection. We thank all curators from the visited herbaria, the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) for funding (process no. 407513/2018-3), and the Universidade Estadual do Maranhão (UEMA) for the Master’s scholarship.

Disclosure statement

The authors state there is no potential conflict of interest.

Supplemental material

Supplemental material for this article can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.1080/14772000.2022.2099478.

Associate Editor: Prof. Aelys Humphreys

Additional information

Funding

This work was funded by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) (Edital Universal, 407513/2018-3).

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