Authors
Ivania Cerón‐Souza, Elsie Rivera‐Ocasio, Ernesto Medina, Jorge A Jiménez, W Owen McMillan, Eldredge Bermingham
Publication date
2010/6
Journal
American journal of botany
Volume
97
Issue
6
Pages
945-957
Publisher
Botanical Society of America
Description
Premise of the study: Hybridization is common in both animals and plants and can lead to a diverse array of outcomes ranging from the generation of new ecotypes or species to the breakdown of morphological differences. Here, we explore the extent of hybridization in the three currently recognized New World Rhizophora species—R. mangle, R. racemosa, and the putative hybrid species R. harrisonii.
Methods: We assayed variation across the three recognized Rhizophora species using two noncoding chloroplast (cpDNA), two flanking microsatellite regions (FMRs), and six microsatellite loci.
Key results: Gene genealogies of cpDNA and FMRs showed a strong phylogeographic break across the Central American Isthmus, but little relationship to recognized species boundaries. Instead, individuals collected in the same ocean basin and classified as R. mangle and R. racemosa by morphological characteristics …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
I Cerón‐Souza, E Rivera‐Ocasio, E Medina… - American journal of botany, 2010