Pterogyneae Legume Phylogeny Working Group, tribus nov.
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.240.101716 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A124CE64-BF64-B78C-0354-7814C1BF29CE |
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scientific name |
Pterogyneae Legume Phylogeny Working Group, tribus nov. |
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Tribe Pterogyneae Legume Phylogeny Working Group, tribus nov. LSID
Figs 18 View Figure 18 , 19 View Figure 19 , 20 View Figure 20
Diagnosis.
Differing from all other tribes of subfamily Caesalpinioideae by the combination of imparipinnate leaves with a well-formed rachis extension, alternate leaflets, compact catkin-like racemes, flowers small, polygamous and regular, the ovary with a marginal wing, style subterminal, fruit a samara with the basal seed chamber with a small subterminal beak (style remnant), and chromosome number 2 n = 20.
Type.
Pterogyne Tul. (designated here).
Included genera.
Tribe Pterogyneae includes only the genus Pterogyne with one species.
Clade-based definition.
The most inclusive crown clade containing Pterogyne nitens Tul., but not Ceratonia siliqua L., Umtiza listeriana Sim or Cassia fistula L.
Notes.
The tribe Pterogyneae is being proposed here to include the single genus Pterogyne . This genus was previously ascribed to the tribe Cynometreae (currently subfamily Detarioideae ) by Bentham (1865) and Taubert (1894). Later, it was recognised as morphologically distinct and placed in the phenetically isolated Pterogyne group within the broadly polymorphic and polyphyletic tribe Caesalpinieae (sensu Polhill and Vidal 1981; Lewis 2005b). This isolated position was also demonstrated by phylogenetic analyses using different morphological and molecular markers, in which Pterogyne is resolved in quite different positions in the Caesalpinioideae phylogeny (Fig. 18 View Figure 18 ). Most plastid sequence data support a position of Pterogyne as sister to the Caesalpinieae ( Caesalpinia clade in Bruneau et al. 2001, 2008; Fig. 18C View Figure 18 ), whereas combined analyses of plastid and morphological data ( Herendeen et al. 2003a) and the nuclear sucrose synthase (SUSY) gene ( Manzanilla and Bruneau 2012) suggest a closer relationship with the Cassieae (Fig. 18B View Figure 18 ). More recent analyses of the entire plastid genome of the Leguminosae also provided ambiguous results and found Pterogyne to cluster with the Caesalpinieae when considering only the coding genes (Fig. 18C View Figure 18 ) and sister to all remaining Caesalpinioideae when considering the non-coding loci (Fig. 18D View Figure 18 ; Zhang et al. 2020). Phylogenomic analyses of ca. 1500 nuclear genes supported Pterogyne as sister to all Caesalpinioideae , except the Ceratonieae and Gleditisieae clades (Fig. 18A View Figure 18 ; Zhao et al. 2021; Kates et al. 2024).
The uncertain phylogenetic position of Pterogyne probably reflects the short diversification time between the divergence of the four distinct lineages, Pterogyne , Cassieae , Caesalpinieae , and the remaining Caesalpinioideae , in the Paleocene, with Pterogyne representing a long branch diverging from those other lineages between 57 Ma and 60 Ma ( Zhao et al. 2021).
The recognition of the monogeneric (and monospecific) tribe Pterogyneae is additionally supported by its unique combination of morphological features, as highlighted in the diagnosis above. This isolated evolutionary position is also corroborated by a chromosome number of 2 n = 20 for Pterogyne nitens , which is cytologically unique in subfamily Caesalpinioideae ( Goldblatt 1981b).
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