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An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks: review of previous taxonomic schemes and synthesis of evolutionary patterns

View ORCID ProfileThomas Denk, View ORCID ProfileGuido W. Grimm, Paul S. Manos, View ORCID ProfileMin Deng, View ORCID ProfileAndrew Hipp
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/168146
Thomas Denk
1Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 50007, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden
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Guido W. Grimm
2Unaffiliated, 45100 Orléans, France
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Paul S. Manos
3Duke University, Durham NC 27708, USA
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Min Deng
4Shanghai Chenshan Plant Science Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201602, China
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Andrew Hipp
5The Morton Arboretum, Lisle IL 60532-1293, USA
6The Field Museum, Chicago IL 60605, USA
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Abstract

In this paper, we review major classification schemes proposed for oaks by John Claudius Loudon, Anders Sandøe Ørsted, William Trelease, Otto Karl Anton Schwarz, Aimée Antoinette Camus, Yuri Leonárdovich Menitsky, and Kevin C. Nixon. Classifications of oaks (Fig. 1) have thus far been based entirely on morphological characters. They differed profoundly from each other because each taxonomist gave a different weight to distinguishing characters; often characters that are homoplastic in oaks. With the advent of molecular phylogenetics our view has considerably changed. One of the most profound changes has been the realisation that the traditional split between the East Asian subtropical to tropical subgenus Cyclobalanopsis and the subgenus Quercus that includes all other oaks is artificial. The traditional concept has been replaced by that of two major clades, each comprising three infrageneric groups: a Palearctic-Indomalayan clade including Group Ilex (Ilex oaks), Group Cerris (Cerris oaks) and Group Cyclobalanopsis (cycle-cup oaks), and a predominantly Nearctic clade including Group Protobalanus (intermediate or golden cup oaks), Group Lobatae (red oaks) and Group Quercus (white oaks, with most species in America and some 30 species in Eurasia). The main morphological feature characterising these phylogenetic lineages is pollen morphology, a character overlooked in traditional classifications. This realisation, along with the now available (molecular-)phylogenetic framework, opens new avenues for biogeographic, ecological and evolutionary studies and a re-appraisal of the fossil record. We provide an overview about recent advances in these fields and outline how the results of these studies contribute to the establishment of a unifying systematic scheme of oaks. Ultimately, we propose an updated classification of Quercus recognising two subgenera with eight sections. This classification considers morphological traits, molecular-phylogenetic relationships, and the evolutionary history of one of the most important temperate woody plant genera.

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Posted July 31, 2017.
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An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks: review of previous taxonomic schemes and synthesis of evolutionary patterns
Thomas Denk, Guido W. Grimm, Paul S. Manos, Min Deng, Andrew Hipp
bioRxiv 168146; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/168146
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An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks: review of previous taxonomic schemes and synthesis of evolutionary patterns
Thomas Denk, Guido W. Grimm, Paul S. Manos, Min Deng, Andrew Hipp
bioRxiv 168146; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/168146

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