ELSEVIER Aquatic Botany 57 (1997) 5-27
The phylogenetic position of river-weeds
(Podostemaceae)" Insights from rbcL sequence data
Donald H. Les a,*, C. Thomas Philbrick b, Alejandro Novelo R. c
a Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269-3042, USA
b Department of Biology, Western Connectwut State Unit,erst~, Danbury, CT 06810, USA
c Departamento de Botrnica, Instituto de Biologla, Universidad Nacional Autdnoma de Mdxtco,
Postal 70-233, 04510 MJxico, D.F., MJxico
Abstract
The systematic position of the river-weed family Podostemaceae remains enigmatic due to
taxonomic difficulties imposed by the radically altered morphology of these alga-like an-
giosperms. Although previous workers have placed this group phylogenetically among a wide
variety of monocotyledons and dicotyledons, most contemporary authors have proposed that
fiver-weeds are closely related to members of the dicotyledonous order Rosales. A diversity of
opinion also exists as to whether the Hyclrostachyaceae are related to Podostemaceae. We have
investigated the phylogeny of fiver-weeds by comparing DNA sequences of the chloroplast
encoded rbcL gene for eight river-weed genera together with 84 other angiosperm and 11
non-flowering seed plant taxa. The high level of sequence divergence in rbcL that exists between
fiver-weeds, Hydrostachyaceae and other angiosperms presents systematic problems that parallel
those associated with the highly divergent morphology of these groups. Rooting rbcL sequences
with distant non-flowering plant outgroups results in a topology where Podostemaceae comprise a
basal angiosperm clade, but in which other renditions of angiosperm family relationships are
depicted unreasonably. Restricting the comparison of river-weed sequences entirely with an-
giosperms places the group as a sister clade to the Hydrostachyaceae as some authors had
anticipated, but this result is only weakly supported. The high level of both morphological and
molecular divergence in the river-weed clade confounds efforts to correctly ascertain their
phylogenetic relationships. A tentative hypothesis from rbcL data is that the Hydrostachyaceae
and Podostemaceae are sister taxa whose closest relatives are the rosid families Crassulaceae and
Haloragaceae. © 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.
* Corresponding author.
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