Phylogenetic relationships of plant species from the flowering desert of the Atacama Region

Authors

  • Roberto Contreras
  • Liesbeth van den Brink
  • Bernardo Sepúlveda
  • Fernanda Aguayo
  • Vincenzo Porcile

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37360/blacpma.20.19.3.18

Keywords:

Atacama Desert, matK, rbcL, DNA barcoding, Flowering Desert

Abstract

Every 3 to 7 year angiosperms species of the flowering desert appear in the Atacama Region of Chile, as a result of the climatic phenomenon "El Niño". Our objective was to evaluate the universality of matK and rbcL barcode markers of these species, and validate their taxon through phylogenetic relationships. Argemone hunnemannii, Oenothera coquimbensis, Malesherbia humilis, Leucocoryne appendiculata, Loasa elongata, Nicotiana solanifolia, Stachys grandidentata, Aristolochia chilensis, Alstroemeria kingii and Adesmia eremophila, almost all classified as endemic to Chile, were collected in Pan de Azúcar and Llanos de Challe National Park (Atacama Region, Chile) at the end of October 2017. The phylogeny of these ten angiosperm species from the flowering desert was analyzed using rbcL and matK markers with the maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference methods. The results showed that 70% of the species can be distinguished with the matK or rbcL locus, however, 100% were distinguished using both loci. The phylogenetic results showed that the species formed clades with high reliability and high support with both the matK and rbcL genes, when comparing our results with sequences obtained from GenBank. The matK and rbcL genes are efficient markers for analyzing phylogenetic relationships and validating the taxonomy of flowering species.

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Published

2020-05-30

How to Cite

Contreras, R., van den Brink, L., Sepúlveda, B., Aguayo, F., & Porcile, V. (2020). Phylogenetic relationships of plant species from the flowering desert of the Atacama Region. Boletín Latinoamericano Y Del Caribe De Plantas Medicinales Y Aromáticas, 19(3), 300-313. https://doi.org/10.37360/blacpma.20.19.3.18

Issue

Section

Invited Article