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Resolving Phylogenetic and Taxonomic Conflict In Begonia

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posted on 2024-06-27, 15:21 authored by Begonia Phylogeny Group, Wisnu Ardi, Lucia Campos, Kuo Fang Chung, Wen-Ke Dong, Eleanor Drinkwater, Danny Fuller, Janet Gagul, George Garnett, Deden Girmansyah, William Goodall-Copestake, Mark Hughes, Eliane Jacques, Orlando Adolfo Jara Muaoz, Julia Sang, Catherine Kidner, Ruth Kiew, Nikhil Krishna, Rosalie Li, Lakmini Kumarage, Mya Bhone Maw, Che Wei Lin, Peter Moonlight, Hieu Quang Nguyen, Thamarat Putthai, AK Pradeep, Sangeeta Rajbhandary, Rosario Rubite, David Scherberich, Keooudone Souvannakhoummane, Madhavi Sreenath, Mark Tebbitt, Daniel Thomas, Daike Tian, Yu Hsin Tseng, Hannah Wilson
Begonia is the world’s fastest-growing genus and a focus of intense taxonomic research. To support this, a stable and useful sectional classification is needed. This paper reviews the feasibility and challenges of creating an infrageneric classification for Begonia based on phylogenetic data, and how to overcome phylogenetic and taxonomic conflict. In particular, it (i) tests genus-wide patterns of incongruence between phylogenies based on the nuclear, chloroplast and mitochondrial genomes; (ii) explains organelle inheritance and its contribution to phylogenetic incongruence, and (iii) presents a manifesto for a workable and stable subgeneric classification in light of the above and lays the foundation for a collaborative Begonia Phylogeny Group.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

79

Page range

1-28

Publication title

Edinburgh Journal of Botany

ISSN

0960-4286

Publisher

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Institution

Writtle School of Agriculture, Animal and Environment Sciences

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