A new phylogenetic framework for the genus Kalanchoe (Crassulaceae) and implications for infrageneric classification
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Background and Aims
Kalanchoe is a diverse genus in the Crassulaceae, with a centre of diversity in Madagascar and sub-Saharan Africa. The genus is known for its popularity in horticulture, its use as a model system for research on CAM photosynthesis and vegetative reproduction, its high invasive potential, and its use in traditional medicine. The genus-rank circumscription and infrageneric classification of Kalanchoe has been the subject of debate for centuries, especially regarding the status and rank of what is now treated as K. subg. Bryophyllum and K. subg. Kitchingia . We aim to generate a densely sampled phylogeny of Kalanchoe s.l. and evaluate the current infrageneric classification system.
Methods
We inferred a phylogenetic tree for Kalanchoe using a ddRAD sequencing approach, covering 70% of taxa and four out of five subgenera currently recognised in the genus.
Key Results
We recovered four well-supported clades, partially corresponding to the current subgeneric classification. Kalanchoe subg. Calophygia resolves as sister to the rest of the genus. The relationships among the three remaining clades, however, receive less support. The predominantly mainland African K. subg . Kalanchoe forms a strongly supported clade that resolves as sister to K. subg. Bryophyllum . These two clades are together sister to a clade containing mainly species from K. subg. Kitchingia and K. sect. Pubescentes .
Conclusions
The current subgeneric classification of Kalanchoe is partially backed up by our phylogenetic tree but requires further refinement. The tree topology suggests a Malagasy origin of the genus and one dispersal event to the African mainland, with subsequent dispersal from continental Africa to the Arabian Peninsula and Southeast Asia. The formation of bulbils on the leaf margin is restricted to a larger clade within K. subg. Bryophyllum and thus only evolved once. Our tree provides a framework for further taxonomic, evolutionary, and physiological research on the genus.