Ficus auriculata (Berg & Corner, 2005)

Zhang, Li-Fang, Zhang, Zhen, Wang, Xiao-Mei, Gao, Hai-Yan, Tian, Huai-Zhen & Li, Hong-Qing, 2018, Molecular Phylogeny of the Ficus auriculata Complex (Moraceae), Phytotaxa 362 (1), pp. 39-54 : 50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.362.1.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D0B06C-3E15-FF88-06BD-3850A4BA601B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ficus auriculata
status

 

Combination of Ficus auriculata View in CoL , F. oligodon , F. hainanensis , and F. beipeiensis

A previous study reported that Ficus auriculata and F. oligodon (shown as auriculata - form and oligodon -form of F. auriculata ) presented synchronous fruiting period and the hybrid seeds could germinate ( Yang et al. 2012). These fig trees also shared the pollinator Ceratosolen emarginatus Mayr ( Yang et al. 2012). Further, the pollinators of F. auriculata could reproduce in the syconia of F. hainanensis and pollinators of F. hainanensis ( Ceratosolen sp. ) can breed their next generation in the syconia of F. auriculata ( Yang et al. 2012) . According to Deng et al. (2015), wasps from F. oligodon (misidentified as F. beipeiensis ) can pollinate female flowers of F. beipeiensis and resulting hybrid seeds. The phylogenetic trees based on Cytb and EF1α confirmed that it was common to see mutual pollination in the sympatric F. auriculata , F. oligodon , and F. hainanensis ( Wei et al. 2014) . It is clear that the non-strict specific pollinators in the co-evolution system limited the differentiation of F. auriculata complex and blurred the interspecific boundaries.

Within these four species, a few sub-branches with high support ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 , C and D, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 , B and C) and regional haplotypes were detected ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ); however, they were not monophyletic and without specialized morphological characters. The samples collected from Motuo in Xizang appeared clustered. However, this might be attributed to intensive sampling from this area. The population sampling strategy of Wei et al. (2014) confirmed the existence of four genetic groups (excluding F. beipeiensis ), which is beneficial for detailed co-evolutionary and infraspecific researches. Considering the existence of morphological and genetic continuity, and the influence of diverse speciation modes ( Baker, 2005), it is wise to regard these four traditional species as parts of a biological species. Before obtaining comprehensive evidences for identifiable subgroups, subspecies/varieties taxonomic treatments will not be carried out.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Rosales

Family

Moraceae

Genus

Ficus

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