Gymnosperms, comprising cycads, Ginkgo , Gnetales, and conifers, represent one of the major groups of extant seed plants. Yet compared to angiosperms, little is known about the patterns of diversification and genome evolution in gymnosperms. We assembled a phylogenetic supermatrix containing over 4.5 million nucleotides from 739 gymnosperm taxa. Although 93.6% of the cells in the supermatrix are empty, the data reveal many strongly supported nodes that are generally consistent with previous phylogenetic analyses, including weak support for Gnetales sister to Pinaceae. A lineage through time plot suggests elevated rates of diversification within the last 100 million years, and there is evidence of shifts in diversification rates in several clades within cycads and conifers. A likelihood-based analysis of the evolution of genome size in 165 gymnosperms finds evidence for heterogeneous rates of genome size evolution due to an elevated rate in Pinus .
CITATION STYLE
Burleigh, J. G., Barbazuk, W. B., Davis, J. M., Morse, A. M., & Soltis, P. S. (2012). Exploring Diversification and Genome Size Evolution in Extant Gymnosperms through Phylogenetic Synthesis. Journal of Botany, 2012, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/292857
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