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Australian Systematic Botany Australian Systematic Botany Society
Taxonomy, biogeography and evolution of plants
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Cassytha pubescens and C. glabella (Lauraceae) are not disjunctly distributed between Australia and the Ryukyu Archipelago of Japan – evidence from morphological and molecular data

Goro Kokubugata A F , Koh Nakamura B , Paul I. Forster C , Gary W. Wilson D , Ailsa E. Holland C , Yumiko Hirayama A and Masatsugu Yokota E
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Botany, National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0005, Japan.

B Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Nangang, Taipei 115, Taiwan.

C Queensland Herbarium, Brisbane Botanic Gardens, Mt Coot-tha Road, Toowong, Qld 4066, Australia.

D Australian Tropical Herbarium, James Cook University Cairns Campus, MacGregor Road, Smithfield, Qld 4878, Australia.

E Laboratory of Ecology and Systematics, Faculty of Science, University of the Ryukyus, Senbaru 1, Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan.

F Corresponding author. E-mail: gkokubu@kahaku.go.jp

Australian Systematic Botany 25(5) 364-373 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB10040
Submitted: 17 August 2010  Accepted: 24 August 2012   Published: 10 October 2012

Abstract

Morphological comparisons and molecular phylogenetic analyses were conducted to resolve taxonomic confusion in Cassytha glabella and C. pubescens, both of which were first described from Australia and subsequently considered to be disjunctly distributed between Australia and the Ryukyu Archipelago of Japan. In the morphological comparisons, plants considered as C. pubescens in the Ryukyus differ from C. pubescens in Australia in the presence or absence of hairs on the petals, and those considered as C. glabella in the Ryukyus differ from the C. glabella in Australia in bract and peduncle morphology. The molecular analyses indicated that plants attributed to C. pubescens in the Ryukyus were not closely related to C. pubescens in Australia, and were nested in a clade of populations of a Pan-Western Pacific species C. filiformis. Plants attributed to C. glabella in the Ryukyus were distantly related to C. glabella in Australia. We concluded that plants considered as C. pubescens and C. glabella in the Ryukyus are to be respectively treated as C. filiformis and the Ryukyu endemic species C. pergracilis.


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