Morphological and ITS sequence divergence between taxa of Cuminia (Lamiaceae), an endemic genus of the Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile

Citation
E. Ruiz et al., Morphological and ITS sequence divergence between taxa of Cuminia (Lamiaceae), an endemic genus of the Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile, BRITTONIA, 52(4), 2000, pp. 341-350
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
BRITTONIA
ISSN journal
0007196X → ACNP
Volume
52
Issue
4
Year of publication
2000
Pages
341 - 350
Database
ISI
SICI code
0007-196X(200010/12)52:4<341:MAISDB>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
Morphological and ITS sequence divergence were assessed between the two pre sently recognized taxa of the endemic genus Cuminia (Lamiaceae), on Masatie rra of the Juan Fernandez Islands. Morphological studies were based on leaf morphology of 51 individuals. Individuals of C, fernandezia have narrow an d lanceolate leaves with cuneate to acute bases and apices, whereas individ uals of C. eriantha have broadly ovate leaves with rounded bases and acute to obtuse apices. The two taxa can also be distinguished by the presence of pubescence. Cuminia eriantha has hairs on the leaves, young stems, floral peduncles, calyx, and corolla. Alternatively, C. fernandezia is glabrous ex cept for tuft hairs on the nodes, and hairs on calyx teeth and corolla tube s. The ITS 1 and 2 regions of the five plants of Cuminia sequenced are a to tal of 451 bp long. All plants have identical ITS-I but pubescent and glabr ous plants are consistently different in ITS-2 sequence, revealing 1.3% tot al sequence divergence between the species. Both morphological and molecula r data support the taxonomic recognition of two taxa, and the small but con sistent differences appear to justify species status for the two entities. The pubescent populations represent C. eriantha and the glabrous ones are C , fernandezia. It is hypothesized that the species diverged from a common a ncestral immigrant to the islands, when Masatierra was much larger and more ecologically diverse than it now is. The two taxa seem to maintain their i dentities with no evidence of hybridization, even though they often grow in close proximity to one other on the island. Each population consists only of glabrous or pubescent plants, with no mixed population detected.