Dissecting the Affinity of Neighboring Malvaceae Genera; Brachychiton and Sterculia Through Morphological, Anatomical, and Molecular Approaches
Fatma A. Hamada; Doaa M. Elkholy; Rim Hamdy; Mohamed Zamzam; Ahmed M. El-Taher; Hammad Ahmad Jan; Atia, Nagwan Hamdy;
Abstract
Morphological, anatomical, and molecular information facilitates the identification
and inference of the relatedness of plant species. In this study, the macromorphological,
micromorphological, and anatomical characteristics of nine species from the Brachychiton
and Sterculia genera belonging to the Malvaceae family were examined by light and a
scanning electron microscope. The study recorded 66 macromorphological, micromorphological,
and anatomical characteristics, thus revealing important variations between
the studied species in leaf morphology and anatomy. This included variations in leaf
complexity, leaf arrangement (phyllotaxy), epidermal cell walls, and their sculpture, as well
as in the types of glandular and non-glandular trichomes. The studied species were mostly
conserved in shedding patterns, being evergreen only in one out of nine studied species.
Similarly, eight species were petiolate. Conversely, leaf arrangement and leaf complexity
characteristics were highly divergent among the studied species, though only one species,
Sterculia foetida, had compound leaves. The differences in the studied features and the
chloroplast genes MaturaseK (MatK) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase large
subunit (rbcl) were exploited to deduce the relationship between the studied species. While
the morphological and anatomical features demonstrated a close relationship between the
studied intrageneric species, the DNA barcoding analysis proved very efficient in distinguishing
the two neighboring genera. Collectively, the different clustering analyses suggest
a close relatedness between Brachychiton acerifolius and B. australis, while only DNA-based
clustering demonstrates cladistic monophyly of the Sterculia species. This study, therefore,
provides a detailed description of various morphological and anatomical features
important for the systematic studies within the Malvaceae family and highlights the value
of incorporating morphological, anatomical, and molecular approaches for inferring the
evolutionary relationship between closely related plant species.
and inference of the relatedness of plant species. In this study, the macromorphological,
micromorphological, and anatomical characteristics of nine species from the Brachychiton
and Sterculia genera belonging to the Malvaceae family were examined by light and a
scanning electron microscope. The study recorded 66 macromorphological, micromorphological,
and anatomical characteristics, thus revealing important variations between
the studied species in leaf morphology and anatomy. This included variations in leaf
complexity, leaf arrangement (phyllotaxy), epidermal cell walls, and their sculpture, as well
as in the types of glandular and non-glandular trichomes. The studied species were mostly
conserved in shedding patterns, being evergreen only in one out of nine studied species.
Similarly, eight species were petiolate. Conversely, leaf arrangement and leaf complexity
characteristics were highly divergent among the studied species, though only one species,
Sterculia foetida, had compound leaves. The differences in the studied features and the
chloroplast genes MaturaseK (MatK) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase large
subunit (rbcl) were exploited to deduce the relationship between the studied species. While
the morphological and anatomical features demonstrated a close relationship between the
studied intrageneric species, the DNA barcoding analysis proved very efficient in distinguishing
the two neighboring genera. Collectively, the different clustering analyses suggest
a close relatedness between Brachychiton acerifolius and B. australis, while only DNA-based
clustering demonstrates cladistic monophyly of the Sterculia species. This study, therefore,
provides a detailed description of various morphological and anatomical features
important for the systematic studies within the Malvaceae family and highlights the value
of incorporating morphological, anatomical, and molecular approaches for inferring the
evolutionary relationship between closely related plant species.
Other data
| Title | Dissecting the Affinity of Neighboring Malvaceae Genera; Brachychiton and Sterculia Through Morphological, Anatomical, and Molecular Approaches | Authors | Fatma A. Hamada; Doaa M. Elkholy; Rim Hamdy; Mohamed Zamzam; Ahmed M. El-Taher; Hammad Ahmad Jan; Atia, Nagwan Hamdy | Keywords | micromorphological;epidermal cell;anticlinal wall;leaf trichomes;plant systematic;DNA barcoding | Issue Date | Feb-2025 | Journal | International Journal of Plant Biology | Volume | 16 | Issue | 18 | Start page | 1 | End page | 22 | DOI | 10.3390/ijpb16010018 |
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| Dissecting the Affinity of Neighboring Malvaceae Genera;.pdf | 10.49 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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