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      Sugar Loaf Landin south-eastern Brazil: a centre of diversity for mat-forming bromeliads on inselbergs

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          ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Predicting species distributions from small numbers of occurrence records: a test case using cryptic geckos in Madagascar

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            OCBIL theory: towards an integrated understanding of the evolution, ecology and conservation of biodiversity on old, climatically buffered, infertile landscapes

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              Phylogeny, adaptive radiation, and historical biogeography in Bromeliaceae: insights from an eight-locus plastid phylogeny.

              Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New World. We use a bromeliad phylogeny based on eight plastid regions to analyze relationships within the family, test a new, eight-subfamily classification, infer the chronology of bromeliad evolution and invasion of different regions, and provide the basis for future analyses of trait evolution and rates of diversification. We employed maximum-parsimony, maximum-likelihood, and Bayesian approaches to analyze 9341 aligned bases for four outgroups and 90 bromeliad species representing 46 of 58 described genera. We calibrate the resulting phylogeny against time using penalized likelihood applied to a monocot-wide tree based on plastid ndhF sequences and use it to analyze patterns of geographic spread using parsimony, Bayesian inference, and the program S-DIVA. Bromeliad subfamilies are related to each other as follows: (Brocchinioideae, (Lindmanioideae, (Tillandsioideae, (Hechtioideae, (Navioideae, (Pitcairnioideae, (Puyoideae, Bromelioideae))))))). Bromeliads arose in the Guayana Shield ca. 100 million years ago (Ma), spread centrifugally in the New World beginning ca. 16-13 Ma, and dispersed to West Africa ca. 9.3 Ma. Modern lineages began to diverge from each other roughly 19 Ma. Nearly two-thirds of extant bromeliads belong to two large radiations: the core tillandsioids, originating in the Andes ca. 14.2 Ma, and the Brazilian Shield bromelioids, originating in the Serro do Mar and adjacent regions ca. 9.1 Ma.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
                Bot. J. Linn. Soc.
                Wiley
                00244074
                July 2016
                July 2016
                February 17 2016
                : 181
                : 3
                : 459-476
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institut für Biowissenschaften, Allgemeine und Spezielle Botanik; Universität Rostock; Wismarsche Str. 8 D-18051 Rostock Germany
                [2 ]Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro; Rua Pacheco Leão 915 Jardim Botânico 22460-030 Rio de Janeiro RJ Brazil
                [3 ]Laboratório de Ecologia e Evolução de Plantas; Departamento de Biologia Vegetal; Universidade Federal de Viçosa; Av. PH Rolfs s/n 36570-900 Viçosa MG Brazil
                [4 ]Departamento de Botânica; Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; Av. Antânio Carlos 6627 31270-901 Belo Horizonte MG Brazil
                Article
                10.1111/boj.12383
                32763e3f-87b1-403d-a660-8a5aa42e3bf7
                © 2016

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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