2016
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12802
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Biogeography of the cosmopolitan sedges (Cyperaceae) and the area‐richness correlation in plants

Abstract: Aim Across angiosperm families, the area occupied by a family is strongly correlated with its richness. We explore the causes of this area‐richness correlation using the cosmopolitan family, Cyperaceae Juss., as a model. We test the hypothesis that, despite a proposed tropical origin, temperate lineages in the family diversified at elevated rates. We test the hypothesis that the area‐richness correlation is maintained within intrafamilial clades, and that this relationship could be described as a function of n… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(123 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…Missing species were generally evenly spread throughout the phylogeny, except for the genera Cyperus and Rhynchospora , which were missing 33% and 44.5% of species, respectively. The topology was largely consistent with both Spalink et al () and the Global Carex Group (), with incongruences limited to nodes that were weakly supported in either analysis.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 79%
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“…Missing species were generally evenly spread throughout the phylogeny, except for the genera Cyperus and Rhynchospora , which were missing 33% and 44.5% of species, respectively. The topology was largely consistent with both Spalink et al () and the Global Carex Group (), with incongruences limited to nodes that were weakly supported in either analysis.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 79%
“…The combined datasets from Spalink et al () and the Global Carex Group () contained a total of 697 species, or about 83% of all native Cyperaceae species of the USA and Canada (Figs., S2; Data S1). Missing species were generally evenly spread throughout the phylogeny, except for the genera Cyperus and Rhynchospora , which were missing 33% and 44.5% of species, respectively.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The origin and worldwide diversification of Carex have been discussed in relation to chromosome evolution and adaptation to colder climates (Escudero et al, ; Gebauer et al, ; Hoffmann et al, ), as well as fine‐scale partitioning of niche and distributional ranges of individual species within continents (Waterway et al, ; Gebauer et al, ; Pender, ; Spalink et al, 2016a, 2016b, ; Benítez‐Benítez et al, ). While Cyperaceae have been inferred to have arisen in South America at the late Cretaceous, it was the migration of the ancestors of Carex to the Northern Hemisphere that was the catalyst for the major diversification of this lineage (Léveillé‐Bourret et al, , , 2018a, 2018c; Spalink et al, ). Recent phylogenetic studies have discovered that several early‐diverged lineages of Carex and its closest living relatives are Southeast (SE) Asian (Starr & Ford, 2009; Waterway et al, ; Starr et al, ; Léveillé‐Bourret et al, 2018b), supporting the long‐held view that the genus originated in SE Asia (Nelmes, 1951; Raymond, 1955, 1959; Koyama, 1957; Ball, 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%