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Articles

Basal phylogenetic asymmetry in species-rich natural taxa of plants: a multivariate study

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Pages 1065-1075 | Received 31 May 2021, Accepted 08 Oct 2021, Published online: 12 Nov 2021
 

Abstract

Sister groups at the root of large plant clades (with ≥1000 extant species) are described in terms of variables expressing species richness, geographical distribution, age, diversification rate and speed of molecular evolution. Standard statistical tools and principal component analysis are used to determine and visualize their relationships. In the majority of the 167 groups examined, one clade (the minor) has many fewer species than its sister (the major clade). A striking phenomenon is that many minor clades (17%) contain four or fewer species only. Asymmetry is largely, but not generally reflected by proportions in geographical range and relative speed of molecular evolution: species in the minor clade are more widely distributed than the major clade in 8 groups and – based on available information – we detected longer maximum branch lengths on the minor lineage in 14 cases. The basal lineages considerably differ in diversification rate; the differences are of the same magnitude in many groups as the diversification rate itself calculated for families and orders by other authors. For the major clade, we found a positive relationship between the species richness of clades and geographical range, and negative correlation between the logarithm of species richness and clade age.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to A. Szilágyi, T. Kalapos and the anonymous referees for comments. The study was performed without specific funds.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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