Molecular phylogenetics, seed morphometrics, chromosome number evolution and systematics of European Elatine L. (Elatinaceae) species

View article
PeerJ

Introduction

Waterworts (genus Elatine L.; Elatinaceae, Malpighiales) are small, ephemeral, aquatic herbaceous annuals (Fig. 1), or short-lived perennials, inhabiting the muddy surfaces of ephemeral waters (e.g., temporary pools, shores of lakes and ponds, marshes, and rice-fields). These plants have an interrupted but cosmopolitan distribution, showing strong preference for temperate regions in middle and high latitudes as well tropical mountain ranges (e.g., the Andes). The small, inconspicuous, and mostly cleistogamous flowers of waterworts are usually self-pollinating, but outcrossing can also take place (i.e., facultative autogamy). Since no recent monograph exists for this genus, the total number of species is thought to be between ca 10 (Kubitzki, 2014) to ca 25 (Tucker, 1986). Most of the species is found in Europe, where ten species is registered (Uotila, 2009b) although Flora Europaea lists only eight species (Cook, 1968). Another center of the genus is in North America, where nine species are present (Tucker, 1986).

Examples of morphological diversity in the genus Elatine.

Figure 1: Examples of morphological diversity in the genus Elatine.

(A) Habit of the terrestrial form of Elatine alsinastrum (E. subgenus Potamopithys); (B) flowering shoots of water-living form of Elatine alsinastrum; (C) E. brochonii (Spain); (D) E. triandra (Hungary); (E) E. hexandra (Poland); (F) E. californica (USA); (G) E. hungarica (Hungary); (H) E. hydropiper (Hungary); (I) E. campylosperma (Spain); (J) E. gussonei (Lampedusa); (K) E. gussonei (Sicily); (K) E. macropoda (Sardinia). Photographs by A. Molnár V.

Surprisingly little work has been completed recently in the taxonomy of Elatine. The most recent worldwide monograph (Niedenzu, 1925) echoes the earlier work of Seubert (1845), and although Moesz (1908) proposed a slightly different classification, the original iteration is still used for the taxonomy of this genus. According to this classification, the genus can be split into two subgenera, Potamopytis (Adanson) Seub. which is represented just by the morphologically distinct (leaves in whorls) species Elatine alsinastrum L., and subgenus Elatine Seub. (subg. Hydropiper Moesz) which contains all the other species (leaves arranged opposite). The Elatine subgenus is further divided into two sections: Elatinella Seub., which includes species with diplostemonous flowers (i.e., stamens arranged in two whorls and thus having double the number of sepals), usually arranged in a tetramerous flower; and Crypta (Nutt.) Seub., which includes species of trimerous flowers that show haplostemony (i.e., an arrangement of stamens in a single whorl opposite the sepals thus having an equal number of anthers and sepals). While Europe is rich in species belonging to section Elatinella (all species included in this section are native to Europe and temperate Asia with the exception of the North American E. californica A. Gray and South American E. ecuadoriensis Molau), section Crypta has a center of species diversity in North America, while Eurasia boasts just two species, E. ambigua Wight and E. triandra Schkuhr. The species of waterworts that occur in the Southern Hemisphere are all members of the latter section, with the exception of E. ecuadoriensis. The work presented in this paper focuses on the European species but also provides an outlook on the North American members of the genus.

Although recent work has augmented our knowledge of the biology of European Elatine (Popiela & Łysko, 2010; Popiela et al., 2011; Popiela et al., 2012; Molnár, Popiela & Lukács, 2013b; Popiela et al., 2013; Takács et al., 2013; Kalinka et al., 2014), there are still few studies that deal with this taxonomy of this genus in Europe (Mifsud, 2006; Uotila, 2009c; Molnár et al., 2013a). In the meantime, many new species have been described from the Americas and Australia (Mason, 1956; Schmidt-Mumm & Bernal, 1995; Albrecht, 2002; Garneau, 2006; Lægaard, 2008). Most researchers agree that seed morphology is of exceptional importance in the taxonomy of Elatine (Moesz, 1908; Mason, 1956; Cook, 1968; Mifsud, 2006; Molnár et al., 2013a; Molnár et al., 2015), and seed shape (i.e., how much it is curved) as well as seed surface reticulation (i.e., number and shape of seed pits) have traditionally been characters of high significance used for recognising species in the genus (Moesz, 1908; Tucker, 1986; Mifsud, 2006; Molnár et al., 2013a). Although vegetative characters, including pedicel length and leaf-shape, are also sometimes emphasised as important sources of taxonomic information (Seubert, 1845; Niedenzu, 1925), these features have generally been thought to be more variable between aquatic and terrestrial forms of the same species than between separate species (Mason, 1956; Molnár et al., 2013a; Molnár, Popiela & Lukács, 2013b; Molnár et al., 2015).

Over recent decades, this genus has received a great deal of attention from molecular phylogenetic workers following the discovery of its important phylogenetic position within Malpighiales (Davis & Chase, 2004). Indeed, the bulk of studies dealing with this order have paid much attention to samples of Elatine as representative of the family (Davis et al., 2005; Tokuoka & Tobe, 2006), and only a very recent one focused on internal phylogenetic relationships within the genus (Cai et al., 2016). Most recent studies have clearly indicated a sister-group relationship between the two genera (i.e., Elatine and Bergia L.) in family Elatinaceae (Korotkova et al., 2009; Wurdack & Davis, 2009; Davis & Anderson, 2010; Xi et al., 2012), and a divergence age of 85–113 million year ago (Ma) has estimated for this lineage (Davis et al., 2005). In spite of this phylogenetic information, at the time of writing this paper we knew almost nothing about phylogenetic relationships within the genus Elatine, and so were unable to test the taxonomic hypothesis of Seubert (1845) postulated more than a century and a half ago.

To fill this gap in our knowledge, we present a molecular phylogeny of the genus Elatine in this paper that employs 27 samples from 13 species based on nuclear and plastid sequences. In addition to molecular work, we also present a morphometric analysis of seeds that enables a test of the explanatory power of seed morphology as a phylogenetic took within this genus. Our aim is to test taxonomic treatments that are currently applied as well as to provide a modern systematic treatment based on our results.

Materials and Methods

Plant material and taxon sampling

Plant tissue samples were collected and embedded in silica-gel from cultivated plants kept in Debrecen that encompass the taxonomic range of genus Elatine in Europe (Table 1). Elatine alsinastrum, Elatine hungarica, E. hydropiper and E. triandra are protected species and were sampled in Hungary with the permission of the Hortobágy National Park Directorate (Permission id.: 45-2/2000, 250-2/2001). Although our focus was on this region, represented by all 11 species found on the continent (i.e., four from section Crypta, six from section Elatinella), we included samples from North American members of the genus, and added Bergia texana as an outgroup. Altogether, 14 species are represented in our collection covering almost the whole section Elatinella (only E. ecuadoriensis is missing), and four species of section Crypta are also included. Cultivated plants originate from our field collections of seedling plants or seeds, sown on sterile soil and kept in climate-controlled chambers. Thus, 1–5 young plants from germinated seeds were grown under constant conditions (14 h/day light and 30 µmol m-2 sec-1 light intensity; temperatures: daytime 22 ± 2 °C, dark hours 18 ± 2 °C) to form clonal groups and in order to set seed. Plant material of a single discrete clonal group was sampled into silica-gel for DNA analysis, while mature seeds were collected from plants. These seeds were sent to the Polish co-authors in Szczecin for scanning electron microscopy (SEM).

Table 1:
The samples included in this study; species sampled, sample origins, abbreviated sample names (as appear on phylogenetic trees) and GenBank accession numbers.
Species Locality Lat. (°N) Long. (°E) Abbreviated name GenBank accession numbers
nrITS accD-psaI psbJ-petA ycf6-psbM-trnD
Elatine alsinastrum L. Hungary: Tiszalúc 48.03 21.11 E. alsinastrum (HU) KX555572 KX818143 KX818170 KX818116
E. ambigua Wight Italy: Vigevano 45.33 8.79 E. ambigua (IT) KX555573 KX818150 KX818177 KX818123
E. ambigua Wight Nepal: Aardash Nagar 27.01 84.86 E. ambigua (NP) KX555574 KX818151 KX818178 KX818124
E. brachysperma A.Gray USA, California: Fallbrook 33.46 −117.37 E. brachysperma (US) KX555575 KX818146 KX818173 KX818119
E. brochonii Clav. Morocco: Ben Slimane 33.62 −7.07 E. brochonii (MA) KX555576 KX818144 KX818171 KX818117
E. brochonii Clav. Spain: San Silvestre de Guzmán 37.4 −7.36 E. brochonii (SP) KX555577 KX818145 KX818172 KX818118
E. californica A.Gray USA, California: Los Angeles 33.82 −118.34 E. californica (US) KX555578 KX818154 KX818181 KX818127
E. campylosperma Seub. ex Walp. Italy: Sardinia: Gesturi 39.73 9.03 E. campylosperma (IT) KX555579 KX818160 KX818187 KX818133
E. campylosperma Seub. ex Walp. Spain: El Rocío 37.12 −6.49 E. campylosperma (SP) KX555580 KX818161 KX818188 KX818134
E. gussonei (Sommier) Brullo et al. Morocco: Ben Slimane 33.61 −7.1 E. gussonei (MA) KX555581 KX818163 KX818190 KX818136
E. gussonei (Sommier) Brullo et al. Spain: Casar de Cáceres 39.33 −6.25 E. gussonei (SP) KX555582 KX818168 KX818195 KX818141
E. gussonei (Sommier) Brullo et al. Malta: Gózó: Ta’ Sannat 36.01 14.25 E. gussonei (MT) KX555583 KX818164 KX818191 KX818137
E. gussonei (Sommier) Brullo et al. Italy: Lampedusa 35.51 12.56 E. gussonei (LMP) KX555584 KX818169 KX818196 KX818142
E. gussonei (Sommier) Brullo et al. Italy: Sicily: Modica 36.76 14.77 E. gussonei (IT) KX555585 KX818162 KX818189 KX818135
E. hexandra DC. Spain: San Silvestre de Guzmán 37.4 −7.36 E. hexandra (SP) KX555586 KX818148 KX818175 KX818121
E. hexandra DC. Poland: Parowa 51.39 15.23 E. hexandra (PL1) KX555587 Not included Not included Not included
E. hexandra DC. Poland: Poznań (Milicz) 51.55 17.35 E. hexandra (PL2) KX555588 KX818147 KX818174 KX818120
E. hexandra DC. UK: Cornwall, Bodmin Moora NA NA E. hexandra (GB) KX555589 KX818149 KX818176 KX818122
E. hungarica Moesz Hungary: Konyár 47.31 21.67 E. hungarica (HU) KX555590 KX818155 KX818182 KX818128
E. hungarica Moesz Russia: Volgograd 49.76 45.7 E. hungarica (RU) KX555591 KX818156 KX818183 KX818129
E. hydropiper L. Hungary: Tiszagyenda 47.36 20.52 E. hydropiper (HU) KX555592 KX818157 KX818184 KX818130
E. hydropiper L. Poland: Kwiecko 54.03 16.69 E. hydropiper (PL) KX555593 KX818158 KX818185 KX818131
E. macropoda Guss. Turkey: Büyükhusun 39.51 26.38 E. macropoda (TR) KX555594 KX818166 KX818193 KX818139
E. macropoda Guss. Spain: Casar de Cáceres 39.19 −6.29 E. macropoda (SP) KX555595 KX818165 KX818192 KX818138
E. macropoda Guss. Italy: Sardegna: Olmedo 40.63 8.41 E. macropoda (IT) KX555596 KX818167 KX818194 KX818140
E. orthosperma Dueb. Finland: Oulu 65.06 25.47 E. orthosperma (FI) KX555597 KX818159 KX818186 KX818132
E. triandra Schkuhr Poland: Janików 51.56 14.98 E. triandra (PL) KX555598 KX818153 KX818180 KX818126
E. triandra Schkuhr Hungary: Karcag 47.27 20.9 E. triandra (HU) KX555599 KX818152 KX818179 KX818125
Bergia texana Seub. ex Walp.b USA, California: Perris 33.84 −117.13 Bergia KX555600 Not included Not included Not included
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2800/table-1

Notes:

purchased from Kew DNA Bank (ID: 12361).
included as outgroup.

DNA regions considered

Since at the time of designing our study no previous molecular work has ever discovered the intra-generic molecular variability of the genus Elatine, we screened one mitochondrial region, three nuclear regions, and nine plastid regions commonly used in plant phylogenetics on three selected samples (Table S1). Of these, the nuclear ribosomal ITS (nrITS) region (Baldwin et al., 1995; Álvarez & Wendel, 2003; Nieto-Feliner & Rosselló, 2007), the accD-psaI intergenic spacer (Small et al., 1998), the psbJ-petA intergenic spacer (Shaw et al., 2007), and the ycf6-psbM-trnD intergenic spacer (Shaw et al., 2005), the latter three regions representing the plastid genome, were chosen for sequencing across the whole sample set (see ‘Results’).

DNA extraction, amplification, cloning, and sequencing

Total genomic DNA was extracted from approximately 15–30 mg of silica-gel dried plant material, thoroughly ground in liquid nitrogen and then resuspended in lysis buffer (2% CTAB, 20 mM EDTA pH 8, 100 mM Tris–HCl pH 9, and 1.4 mM NaCl). Following incubation at 65 °C for 60 min, samples were centrifuged at 20,000 g for 3 min, before supernatant was extracted with an equal volume of chloroform and centrifuged for 10 min at 20,000 g. This extraction procedure was repeated twice, and DNA was precipitated with an equal volume of iso-propanol plus 0.08 volume of 7.5 M ammonium-acetate and stored at −20 °C for 1 h. DNA was pelleted by centrifugation at 20,000 g for 12 min; each pellet was washed twice with 70% ethanol, dried on open-air, and redissolved in 40–100 µl 0.1 M Tris (pH 7.5).

The angiosperm-specific ITS1A (5- GAC GTC GCG AGA AGT CCA) primer (Gulyás et al., 2005) and the universal primer ITS4 (White et al., 1990) were applied for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to specifically amplify plant nrITS. The PCR reaction mixture contained 0.1 volume 10 × Taq buffer with (NH4)2SO4 (Fermentas), 200 µM of each dNTPs (Fermentas), 2 mM MgCl2, 0.2 µM of each primer, 1.25 U DreamTaq Green polymerase (Fermentas), and 1 µl unquantified genomic DNA extract. Amplifications were performed on an Abi Veriti 9600 thermal cycler (Applied Biosystems), programmed for an initial denaturation step at 94 °C for 4.30 min, followed by 33 cycles of denaturation for 30 s at 94 °C, annealing for 30 s at 51 °C, and extension for 30 s at 72 °C. Extension times were increased by one second at each cycle, and thermal cycling ended with a final extension for 7.00 min at 72 °C.

All plastid regions were amplified by the primers described in their corresponding publications and under the same PCR conditions. The reaction mixture was the same as described for nrITS, and the amplification regime followed a touchdown protocol: an initial denaturation step at 94 °C for 5 min, followed by 20 cycles of denaturation for 30 s at 94 °C, annealing for 30 s starting at 58°C, decreased by 0.5 °C in each cycle, then extension for 1.30 s at 72 °C, followed by 20 subsequent cycles using the same regime but keeping the annealing temperature constant at 48 °C. Thermal cycling was ended with a final extention at 72 °C for 7.00 min.

Quality and quantity of PCR products were evaluated by loading them onto a 1% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. For direct sequencing, unpurified PCR products were submitted to a commercial purification and sequencing service provided by Macrogen Inc. (Korea). All regions were sequenced from the forward and reverse directions using the original primers as sequencing primers. The ycf6-psbM-trnD region was amplified as a whole, but sequenced using the psbM gene anchoring primers as additional internal sequencing primers.

Cloning was performed on two E. hexandra samples from Poland which showed unambiguous double-peaks in their nrITS direct sequences. These purified PCR products were ligated and transformed into the pGEM-T Easy Vector System II (Promega) following the manufacturer’s instructions. Transformed cells were screened with ampicillin, and recombinant plasmid DNA was isolated from white colonies by suspending them in 40 µl sterile MilliQ water, subboiling for 5 mins at 98 °C, and then centrifugating at 20,000 g. The plant nrITS region was amplified and cycle-sequenced from eight and ten clones per individual in the same PCR and sequencing conditions as described above. Clone sequences were sequenced only from the forward direction.

Sequence analyses, alignment and phylogenetic analyses

Forward and reverse sequencing reads were manually checked by eye using the software Chromas Lite v.2.01 (Technelysium Pty). The nrITS sequences were carefully screened for additive polymorphic sites (i.e., overlapping peaks at certain, phylogenetically informative sites), and IUPAC ambiguity symbols were used to indicate these when two nucleotides occurred together at the electropherogram rather than an indication of ambiguous reading. In one case (E. gussonei MT)—where the additivity of a single site in the nrITS sequence was evidently from the result of two, closely related species—we used the sequences of the supposed parental species (E. gussonei LMP and E. macropoda IT) to represent this sample in our analyses. Sequences were aligned manually using BioEdit v.7.1.3 (Hall, 1999). Due to the great number of mutations separating Bergia texana from Elatine, we were unable to reliably align it in the plastid matrix. Consequently, we had to exclude it from the plastid and combined analyses, but we were able to include it in the nrITS matrix. The phylogenetic relationship between the cloned ribotypes of Polish E. hexandra samples was inferred with the software TCS v.1.21 (Clement, Posada & Crandall, 2000) using default parameters but allowing the connection of ribotypes 100 steps away. One of the most frequently occurring cloned ribotypes (PL1.3, PL1.10, PL2.1, PL2.7) of each ribogroup was selected to represent (see LaJeunesse & Pinzón, 2007) the cloned samples in the phylogenetic analyses. All sequences are deposited in GenBank (Table 1.)

We worked with two main data matrices. One consisted of the nuclear marker (nrITS), the second one of the plastid markers (comprising of accD-psaI, psbJ-petA, ycf6-psbM-trnD). The latter regions were combined together because the plastid genome is inherited as a unit and is not subject to significant recombination (Palmer et al., 1988; Jansen & Ruhlman, 2012), making it readily combinable for phylogenetic analyses (Doyle, 1992; Soltis & Soltis, 1998). Given the high number of variable nucleotide sites in the above two matrices, gaps were treated as missing in subsequent analyses. Following separated analyses of the two main matrices, we checked for ‘hard incongruencies’ (Mason-Gamer & Kellogg, 1996; Seelanan, Schnabel & Wendel, 1997; Wendel & Doyle, 1998) in the resulting trees: branch placement was only considered to be in hard incongruence when they received >70% bootstrap and >0.95 posterior probability support—an approach advocated by many workers (Daru et al., 2013; Patchell, Roalson & Hall, 2014; Scheunert & Heubl, 2014), favoured over the commonly used ILD-test (Farris et al., 1994), which can fail to correctly test combinability (Dolphin et al., 2000; Barker & Lutzoni, 2002; Darlu & Lecointre, 2002). Since no such hard incongruence was observed, we combined the nuclear and plastid matrices into a combined matrix. Samples with nrITS sequences showing paralogy [hexandra (PL), gussonei (MT)] were only represented by their plastid sequences in this latter matrix (i.e., only their plastid sequences were used in the combined analyses, nrITS was coded as ‘missing’).

Heuristic searches using the Maximum Parsimony (MP) criterion were conducted on the three matrices (i.e., nuclear, plastid, combined) separately in Paup v.4.0b*10 (Swofford, 2003) using the same settings. In addition to default settings, the search utilised a tree bisection-reconnection swapping algorithm holding ten trees in each iteration step with 1,000 random sequence replicates. All most parsimonious trees (MPTs) were saved and an arbitrary chosen tree was interpreted via statistical branch support. The statistical robustness of tree topology was tested via the non-parametric bootstrap procedure (Felsenstein, 1985) using 1,000 pseudo-replicates in simple heuristic search. Branches were considered to be none (<50%), weakly (51–74%), moderately (75–84%), or strongly (>85%) supported.

Phylogenetic trees using Bayesian inference (BI) were also constructed using the same matrices. These trees were built using the MrBayes v.3.2.2 software (Ronquist et al., 2012) using the model-jumping feature. Thus, various possible models of molecular evolution were sampled for each gene (both single and combined data) during the analysis by taking advantage of command lset applyto = (all) nucmodel = 4by4 nst = mixed rates = gamma covarion = no;’. The combined matrix was partitioned into nuclear and plastid datasets, and these were treated separately during the runs. Two independent Markov chain Monte Carlo analyses with four simultaneous chains (one cold and three heated) for each analysis were run for 10,000,000 generations by sampling trees and parameters in every 1,000th generation, while convergence of the two runs was checked using Tracer v.1.5 (available from http://tree.bio.ed.ac.uk/software/tracer/) inspecting effective sample sizes and visually evaluating the joint-marginal densities and log likelihood traces. We discarded the first 2,500,000 generations as ‘burn in’ and trees were summarised using the 50 percent majority rule method. Posterior probability (PP) values of each branch were considered as test of statistical robustness treating branches with PP <0.85 as none, 0.85–0.89 as weakly, 0.9–0.95 as moderately, >0.95 as strongly supported.

Morphometric data collection and analyses

In addition to the molecular phylogenetic data, morphological data were collected on all species analysed here. As has been demonstrated previously (Moesz, 1908; Mifsud, 2006; Uotila, 2009c; Molnár et al., 2013a; Molnár, Popiela & Lukács, 2013b), the seed morphology of Elatine spp. is the most reliable character for species-level taxonomy. To obtain material for the morphometric data acquisition, field-collected seeds of the species were transferred to the laboratory, and mature plants were raised in climatic chambers. Fifty seeds were collected from mother plants, and Scanning Electron Microscopic (SEM) pictures were taken. Fifty seeds from each population were photographed and their outlines were digitised using tpsDig2 (Rohlf, 2010). The outline coordinates were transformed using Hangle-Fourier (Haines & Crampton, 2000) function using the PAST v.1.7c (Hammer, Harper & Ryan, 2001) program, and statistical analyses were carried out based on on Hangle coefficients. In order to determine the relationships between predefined groups, a linear discriminant analysis was conducted such that a priori groups were populations. The group centroids were visualised on scatter plots, and Wilks’s λ was used to measure the discriminatory power of the model with values changing from 0 (perfect discrimination) to 1 (no discrimination). Classification was made using the Jackknifed grouping function in PAST; this method, one known specimen is left out each iteration, and assigned using the discriminant function which is calculated based on all the cases except that given. The numbers of correct assignments were used to evaluate the usefulness of the discriminant function. High numbers of correct assignments indicate diagnostic differences between the surveyed groups. We also used pair-wise MANOVA to test the statistical significance between groups.

Results

Initial screen of sequence variability

The twelve regions initially checked for phylogenetic variability showed (Table S1) the typical situation for plants (Soltis & Soltis, 1998); nuclear regions were most variable, followed by plastid intergeneric spacers, and plastid genes, while the mitochondrion-encoded nad6 gene was the least variable between the outgroup and the two ingroups. Amongst nuclear genes, nrITS was found to be the most variable, while ycf6-psbM, trnL-trnF, accD-psaI, and psbJ-petA changed the most of the plastid regions. It is noticeable that At103 and Eif3E showed extensive paralogy in some pilot sequencings of additional Elatine material; thus, we excluded these from further work. Although it was amongst the highly variable regions, the trnH-psbA sequence was also excluded as this marker produced unreadable direct sequences; some pilot sequences showed abrupt unreadability in the middle portion of the intergeneric spacer, but what was recovered at the other end of the region was as if it had length-different paralogous copies. Finally, the region psbM-trnD, albeit its relative invariability, was used, and sequenced, as it was convenient to include together with the highly variable ycf6-psbM region.

Molecular phylogenetic relationships

The parsimony analysis of the nrITS matrix found two equally MPTs of 235 steps with negligible homoplasy (consistency index (CI) = 0.8851, homoplasy index (HI) = 0.1149, retention index (RI) = 0.9403). These trees differ from each other in the main clustering ‘above E. alsinastrum,’ which is not supported by bootstrap analysis and not discussed further. One of the MPTs with support information is displayed as a phylogram (Fig. 2A), with Bergia texana, representative of the sister genus, placed at the root. The following branches towards the tips are not resolved; although placed sister to the rest of the genus in the parsimony analysis, the sister relationship of Elatine alsinastrum is not supported in subsequent bootstrap analysis. There are four more clades identifiable with statistical confidence; that including E. brochonii, E. hexandra, E. brachysperma, E. triandra (including E. ambigua and two clones of Polish E. hexandra), and the clade of tetramerous species. Within the latter, the temperate representatives of this group are sister to the Mediterranean species, which also split into two clades, one containing most E. macropoda and E. campylosperma samples, and a second containing all E. gussonei samples plus a Turkish E. macropoda accession. Within the temperate species of this lineage there is almost no resolution with the exception of the two E. hydropiper accessions which are placed as sisters to each other. The tree obtained by BI totally supports this topology as all branches, found to be supported by the MP bootstrap procedure, were also supported by PP values and thus did not collapse on the majority rule consensus tree of BI (not shown). Therefore, only the PP values are shown on the corresponding branches.

Phylogenetic trees reconstructed using the nrITS (A) and plastid (B) matrices.

Figure 2: Phylogenetic trees reconstructed using the nrITS (A) and plastid (B) matrices.

Both trees are arbitrary chosen MPTs displayed as phylograms with bootstrap support percentages/posterior probability values at the corresponding branches. Dash indicates lack of statistical support, and such branches are indicated by dashed lines. A scale bar representing 20 mutational changes is displayed on both trees, and the abbreviation ‘cl.’ denotes cloned nrITS sequences on the nrITS tree.

The MP analysis of the plastid dataset found two equally MPTs 315 steps in length with negligible homoplasy (CI = 0.9016, HI = 0.0984, RI = 0.9556). One of these, with support information, is displayed as a phylogram (Fig. 2B), but as we were unable to reliably align Bergia in this dataset, it was left out from here, and our use of E. alsinastrum as an alternative outgroup was not supported. From this split towards the tips the branches usually receive high statistical support, with E. brochonii branching off first. This was followed by E. brachysperma and E. triandra clade. The tetramerous clade is again well-supported, but on the plastid tree (Fig. 2B) we find E. campylosperma to be sister to the rest of the group, although this relationship is weakly supported. There is less resolution at the next level of branches, where a strongly supported branch separates E. macropoda and two E. gussonei (MT and LMP) samples from the rest, then all other E. gussonei samples form a clade, E. hexandra samples form a clade, finally the temperate members of the tetramerous species form a clade. Unlike on the nrITS tree, there is resolution in the latter clade as the North American E. californica branches first, this is followed by E. orthosperma what is sister to the E. hungarica plus E. hydropiper clade, where we find no resolution. Again, the majority rule consensus tree found by BI had a fully corroborative topology (not shown), therefore, only the PP values are shown on the MP phylogram at the corresponding branches.

Regarding testing the species delimitation of a priori taxa, multiple accessions of the same species, in most cases, formed strongly supported monophyletic groups. Nevertheless, there were some significant exceptions on the nrITS tree (Fig. 2A), including the Turkish E. macropoda sample was clustered together with E. gussonei samples, the Spanish E. campylosperma sample was clustered together with the E. macropoda samples. On the plastid tree only the E. gussonei samples fell into two separate clades, with two accessions from Malta and Lampedusa sister to E. macropoda, and three accessions of E. gussonei from Italy, Spain and Morocco clustered separately.

There were some incongruent placement of branches, but these only affected tip, or close to tip, branches. The most important of these concerns E. campylosperma, nested within the Mediterranean clade on the nrITS tree, but placed as sister to the rest of the tetramerous clade on the plastid tree. Secondly, samples of E. hexandra are either placed as sister to E. brochonii (although with weak support) or together with E. triandra on the nrITS tree, while these samples are found nested within the clade comprising the three E. gussonei listed above as well as the temperate members of the tetramerous plants.

The TCS-analysis of nrITS clones of Polish E. hexandra unravelled the existence of two ribotype-groups within the same individuals (Fig. 3); these two groups were separated by 22 mutation steps. When included in a wide phylogenetic context (Fig. 2A) the representative ribotypes fall into two very distant clades on the nrITS tree; one group of clones are inseparable from E. triandra and E. ambigua direct sequences, while the other group forms a separate clade together with direct sequences of E. hexandra, sister to E. brochonii.

TCS-network of cloned nrITS sequences of Polish E. hexandra accessions.

Figure 3: TCS-network of cloned nrITS sequences of Polish E. hexandra accessions.

Clone names follow the abbreviated sample name, while the number following it is the indetifier of the clone sequenced. Hypothetical (unrecovered) ribotypes are represented by small circles, and the 22 such ribotypes separating the two ribotype-groups are not represented to keep the figure easily readable.

When we combined the nrITS and plastid dataset the MP search found a single MPT of 443 steps containing little homoplasy (CI = 0.8375, HI = 0.1625, RI = 0.9322) (Fig. 4). Bootstrap analysis recovered support for all branches but the placement of E. alsinastrum at the root, the placement of Polish E. triandra as sister to the E. ambigua sample, and the relationship between E. hungarica samples remained unresolved. In addition, most nodes are highly supported by bootstrap values, and the analysis using BI also found a most credible phylogenetic tree with the very same topology as the MP tree. Again, this tree is not shown, just the PP values are indicated on its counterpart. Multiple accessions of the same a priori species form strongly supported clades in the combined dataset, with the exception is E. hungarica, where samples are not resolved as monophyletic on either tree; another one concerns the samples of E. gussonei, which fall into two separate, closely related clades on the trees.

One of the two MPTs resulted from MP analysis of the combined (nrITS+plastid accD-psaI, psbJ-petA, ycf6-psbM-trnD) sequences displayed as a phylogram (A) and as a cladogram (B).

Figure 4: One of the two MPTs resulted from MP analysis of the combined (nrITS+plastid accD-psaI, psbJ-petA, ycf6-psbM-trnD) sequences displayed as a phylogram (A) and as a cladogram (B).

Next to each branch are bootstrap support values resulting from 1,000 pseudo-replicate followed by Bayesian PP values after the slash.

Morphometric comparison of seeds

Measured populations of different Elatine species proved to be significantly different based on seed outlines, a result with high discriminatory power (Wilks’s λ = 0.00004, p < 0.001). The first axis explained 75% and the second 12% of variance between groups; on the scatter plot of group centroids four morpho-groups can be recognized, straight (I.), curved (II.), highly curved (III.), and an intermediate (IV.) form between curved and straight (Fig. 5). Surprisingly, the results of the post-hoc test indicated that nearly all predefined groups were significantly different from each other except the two Elatine hexandra populations (Table S2). The cross-validated classification correctly assigned 64.1% of the specimens, while classification success varies to a relatively large degree 20–96% between the groups (Table S3).

CVA scatter plot of seed outlines.

Figure 5: CVA scatter plot of seed outlines.

Average outlines are presented.

Discussion

In this paper we provide a detailed molecular phylogenetic study of the genus Elatine by sequencing and analysing the nuclear rITS region and four plastid regions in multiple accessions of 13 species. Through analysis of a combined nuclear and plastid data, the matrix has provided the most resolved and reliable phylogenetic hypothesis for the studied taxa, and is able to interpret the phylogenetic relationships hypothesized by this tree (Fig. 4).

Molecular phylogenetic relationships

Although morphologically highly different (Fig. 1), E. alsinastrum was placed equivocally as sister to the rest of the genus. In contrast, E. brochonii, a trimerous flowered, haplostemon species of the Western Mediterranean was placed at the base of the tree. We have to note here that the analysis of Cai et al. (2016) placed this species unequivocally as sister to the rest of the genus, but that analysis lacked E. brochonii. The rest of the species analysed here are split into two main lineages, most probably representing the two main clades of the genus Elatine. One corresponds to the traditional section Crypta, and consists of trimerous flowered, haplostemon species with slightly or non-curved seeds (E. ambigua, E. brachysperma, E. triandra). The North American species thus apparently represent a separate lineage, and—together with the high species diversity of trimerous, haplostemon species found on this continent—hint at the North American diversification and origin of the Crypta clade.

Within the diplostemon clade, E. hexandra branches first as sister to the rest; although this result is statistically highly supported, a stabilised hybrid origin of this species can be postulated based on its phylogenetic position. This placement of lineages could be indicative of hybrid origin, as discussed in detail by Funk (1985), and is further corroborated by the presence of phylogenetically very distantly related ribotypes (Fig. 3) within the same individual, derived from the Crypta and the E. brochonii lineage (Fig. 2A). Furthermore, Uotila (2009a) reported the presence of morphological instability in this species, as three and exceptionally four carpels can be observed. Highest ploidy level (dodecaploidy) can also be found in this species (Jankun, 1989),perhaps the result of allopolyploidisation (Wendel, 2000), and could have prevented the completion of concerted evolution of nrITS arrays located on non-homologous chromosomes (Wendel, Schnabel & Seelanan, 1995; Álvarez & Wendel, 2003). Thus, on the basis of these arguments, we conclude an allopolyploid hybrid origin for the species E. hexandra. Although its exact origin is equivocal, E. triandra as one parent can be stated with high certainty, while high ploidy level in this species might be the sign of the involvement of more than one additional taxa. Additional ribotypes hint at an E. brochonii-like ancestral species (trimerous flowers, slightly curved seeds, haplostemon adroecium), while the plastid affinity to tetramerous members of the genus clearly indicates genome donors with tetramerous flowers.

The other main lineage within this section of the tree is represented by the tetramerous flowered, diplostemon species of section Elatinella. The species in this lineage can further be divded into two main sub-lineages: one consist of species with Temperate distribution (Fig. 4: clade D), while the other one includes species of Mediterranean distribution (Fig. 4: clade E). Out of these, all but E. californica (North American), E. hungarica, and E. hydropiper (both Palearctic) are confined geographically to the European continent, where the diversification of section Elatinella might have taken place. Nonetheless, the placement of E. californica close to the root of this clade can imply a Nearctic origin for the section; this group might have originated in North America and then later diversified in the Old World. However, this is in contrarst to the result of Cai et al. (2016), who postulated a Eurasian origin of the genus. Within clade D, the northern Eurasian E. orthosperma is hypothesised to be sister to the species-pair E. hungarica and E. hydropiper, which show certain vicariance; the former is typical of the Eurasian steppe zone (Lukács et al., 2013), while the latter can be considered to be an Atlantic-boreal species inhabiting more northern latitudes in Eurasia (Popiela et al., 2012).

The other main sublineage (clade E) is represented by species inhabiting the Mediterranean Basin, including E. campylosperma, E. gussonei, and E. macropoda. The species branching the earliest is E. campylosperma, a taxonomically neglected species (see below). This is followed by E. gussonei, what is further split into two lineages, the western Mediterranean samples form a separate clade, while plants from Malta and Lampedusa are sister to a monophyletic E. macropoda. However, there are some notable incongruencies between the trees obtained from contrastingly inherited markers (Fig. 2): (i) including the Spanish E. campylosperma that has identical nrITS to E. macropoda, but shares plastid haplotypes with the other E. campylosperma from Italy; (ii) including the Turkish E. macropoda which is included in the E. gussonei clade on the nrITS tree, nested within the E. macropoda clade on the plastid tree. These incongruent placements on trees of differently inherited markers are commonly explained by recent hybridisation (Rieseberg, Whitton & Linder, 1996; Wendel & Doyle, 1998). Indeed, these Mediterranean species of Elatine have much bigger and conspicuous flowers compared to their Temperate siblings (Fig. 1), which probably promotes cross-pollination by insects, opening the way to hybridisation of these species that often occur in sympatry. Indeed, the merging of E. macropoda and E. gussonei ribotypes in the Maltese E. gussonei accession directly demonstrates this capability of setting seed by cross-pollination in this predominantly selfing genus.

Seed morphometrics in Elatine

On the one hand, our results clearly indicate that the outline of seeds alone is not suitable for species delimitation while, on the other, four morpho-groups can be recognized in the in the CVA plots among Elatine (Fig. 5), including straight, highly curved, curved, and an intermediate seed shape which are clearly identifiable. Based on the phylogenetic relationships among species, it seems that these main seed shapes do not form monophyletic units; the straight seed shape appears in both the earlier and the most recently divergent species, suggesting that they could have evolved multiple times during the evolution of the genus. Therefore, seed shape alone can only be used to define species within a given evolutionary lineage.

Species delimitation in Elatine

The inclusion of multiple accessions of the same a priori species enabled us to test the species delimitations and specific characters used in the taxonomy of this genus. As demonstrated on the plastid tree (Fig. 2B) and on our combined tree (Fig. 4), in most cases multiple accessions of the same species were grouped into the same tip clade. This is one clear indication of the genetic cohesiveness of this species as interpreted in the current taxonomy of the genus (Cook, 1968; Uotila, 2009b), plus these tip clades are placed on rather long branches in phylograms (Figs. 2 and 4A) indicating substantial genetic differentiation. One notable exception, however, is the E. hungaricaE. hydropiper sibling species, where there is a significant difference in seed characteristics (Fig. 5). Similarly, no substantial genetic differences exist between our E. ambigua and E. triandra samples, corroborated by seed characteristics. Thus, given the certain identification of our E. ambigua sample—the presence of significant pedicels, the diagnostic character of this species (Cook, 1968)—we are confident these samples are taxonomically equivalent, thus questioning the presence of the Asian E. ambigua in Europe. In fact, our field experience also suggest this as we repeatedly found E. triandra specimens—usually in full sunshine—with long pedicels in Hungary. This probably also explains why there are scattered and ephemeral observations of this species in Europe (Moesz, 1908; Cook, 1968).

Probably the most conspicuous discrepancy in species delimitation concerns E. gussonei, a neglected species of the Mediterranean Basin (Mifsud, 2006; Kalinka et al., 2014). Our samples of this species fall into two distinct clade (Fig. 4), one which includes the sample from the nomenclatural type locality of Lampedusa (Molnár, Popiela & Lukács, 2013b) is sister to E. macropoda, while the other, including mostly Western Mediterranean samples, forms a separate monophyletic lineage. This substantial genetic difference has to be further studied, but most probably merits taxonomic recognition of at least the subspecies level.

Finally, the presence of an almost forgotten species of European Elatine, E. campylosperma, should be discussed. This plant was described by Seubert (1842) from Sardinia, but was later neglected by most workers who synonymized it under E. macropoda (Cook, 1968; Uotila, 2009b; Popiela & Łysko, 2010). Our data show that plants with highly curved seeds and conspicuous flowers from the Mediterranean Basin can be distinguished as separate molecular and morphological entities, and our ongoing taxonomical investigation suggests that these should be treated as E. campylosperma.

Taxonomic implications

On the basis of the well-resolved molecular phylogenetic tree presented in this paper (Fig. 4), we test the currently used systematic treatment of the genus Elatine proposed originally by Seubert (1845). We corroborate the earlier observation that section Crypta is monophyletic, although our sampling was not focused on this group. In contrast, the other section Elatinella was found to be polyphyletic, including the species E. brochonii. Disregarding this species, the section is monophyletic, further demonstrating the utility of floral morphological characters used in the systematics of Elatine.

Nevertheless, more details are unravelled in this study regarding the intra-sectional genetic lineages and chromosome number characteristics of Elatine section Elatinella (summarised on Fig. 4). Based on these results, we devise the following new section corresponding to clade A, and two new subsections corresponding to clade D and clade E (on Fig. 4):

Bracteata Sramkó, A. Molnár & Popiela, sect. nov.

Type: E. brochonii Clav.

Morphology—Stems 1–10 cm long, erect or prostrate, leaves elliptical, oval or oblong; leafy bracts; two-five trimerous, diplostemonous, sessile flowers in cyme; the supreme flower single, six stamens; seeds straight.

Diagnostic characters—leafy bracts; the supreme flower single; short, straight seeds.

Etymology—The section was named on the basis of the significant and characteristic bracts of the only species.

Distribution—Western Mediterranean (Morocco, Algeria, Spain, Portugal, France, Corsica).

Accepted species—Elatine brochonii.

Hydropiperia Sramkó, A. Molnár & Popiela, subsect. nov.

Type: E. hydropiper L.

Morphology—Shoots branched, rooting at nodes and creeping, 1-10 cm long; leaves oblong, ovale or spatulate; one-two flowers per node, axillary, diplostemonous, tetramerous, sessile or short pedicelled (elongating in fruit), eight stamens; seeds horseshoe, crescent-shaped or long and straight (E. orthosperma).

Diagnostic characters—Procumbent and node-rooting plants; short or very short pedicels, mostly moderate zone, blooms summer/autumn (VI-X).

Etymology—This subsection was named after its most widespread species (E. hydropiper).

Distribution—Circumboreal (Eurasia, North-America).

Accepted species—Elatine californica, E. hungarica, E. hydropiper, and E. orthosperma.

Macropodae Sramkó, A. Molnár & Popiela, subsect. nov.

Type: E. macropoda Guss.

Morphology—Plants about 10 cm long with long internodes, most frequently upright stem, sometimes rooting at nodes and creeping; leaves obovate or oblong obovate; diplostemonous, tetramerous flowers on long pedicels, usually one per node; eight stamens; seeds slightly curved, comma-shaped or horseshoe.

Diagnostic characters—Long pedicel, usually erect; Mediterranean zone; blooms winter/spring (I–IV).

Etymology—This subsection was named after E. macropoda.

Distribution—Mediterranean: mainly on coastal zones and archipelago of the Mediterranean Sea.

Accepted species—Elatine campylosperma, E. gussonei, E. macropoda.

Supplemental Information

The DNA regions screened for molecular variability in this study

The species selected for the initial screening were E. alsinastrum (outgroup: O), E. campylosperma (ingroup: I1), and E. hydropier (ingroup: I2).

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2800/supp-1

Results of MANOVA post-hoc tests

Rows: given group; columns: predicted groups. All the measured populations were significantly different except the two E. hexandra samples.

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2800/supp-2

Jackknife classification of the measured individuals

Correct assignments are indicated with grey. The algorithm could assign correctly 64.1% of the specimens. Classification success varies between 20% and 96%.

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2800/supp-3

Supplementary material

Raw data of seed shape analyses

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2800/supp-4
10 Citations   Views   Downloads