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1 January 2008 Molecular Phylogenetic Relationships of Olacaceae and Related Santalales
Valéry Malécot, Daniel L. Nickrent
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Abstract

As traditionally circumscribed, the family Olacaceae contains a morphologically diverse assemblage of genera that has historically caused much confusion regarding their classification. For example, Olacaceae contain parasites and nonparasites, climbing lianas and trees, and members with dichlamydous and monochlamydous perianths. This family is basalmost in the sandalwood order (Santalales), thus it represents the staging ground for many innovations that evolved in subsequent groups. The present molecular phylogenetic study has obtained DNA sequence data (nuclear SSU rDNA and chloroplast rbcL and matK) for all but two of the 28 genera in this group. Maximum parsimony and Bayesian analyses have resolved seven clades, well-supported by molecular and morphological characters. Root hemiparasitism appears to have first evolved in the clade containing Ximenia whereas clades between that one and the outgroup appear to be entirely autotrophic.

Valéry Malécot and Daniel L. Nickrent "Molecular Phylogenetic Relationships of Olacaceae and Related Santalales," Systematic Botany 33(1), 97-106, (1 January 2008). https://doi.org/10.1600/036364408783887384
Published: 1 January 2008
KEYWORDS
chloroplast DNA
Olacaceae
parasitism
phylogeny
ribosomal DNA
Santalales
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