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Molecular Rates Parallel Diversification Contrasts between Carnivorous Plant Sister Lineages
93
Citations
59
References
2002
Year
Molecular Evolutionary EcologyComparative GenomicsGeneticsGenomicsBladderwort LineagePhylogenetic AnalysisPteridologyPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyEvolutionary TaxonomyPhylogeny ComparisonSecond Trnl ExonGenetic VariationPhylogenomicsPlant BiodiversityPopulation GeneticsBiologyPlant DiversityNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhylogenetic MethodMedicineBladderwort GenomesPlant Phylogeny
In the carnivorous plant family Lentibulariaceae, the bladderwort lineage (Utricularia and Genlisea) is substantially more species-rich and morphologically divergent than its sister lineage, the butterworts (Pinguicula). Bladderworts have a relaxed body plan that has permitted the evolution of terrestrial, epiphytic, and aquatic forms that capture prey in intricately designed suction bladders or corkscrew-shaped lobster-pot traps. In contrast, the flypaper-trapping butterworts maintain vegetative structures typical of angiosperms. We found that bladderwort genomes evolve significantly faster across seven loci (the trnL intron, the second trnL exon, the trnL–F intergenic spacer, the rps16 intron, rbcL, coxI, and 5.8S rDNA) representing all three genomic compartments. Generation time differences did not show a significant association. We relate these findings to the contested speciation rate hypothesis, which postulates a relationship between increased nucleotide substitution and increased cladogenesis.
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