TY - JOUR AU - Thiv, Mike AU - Gouveia, Manuela AU - Menezes de Sequeira, Miguel PY - 2021/12/20 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - The Madeiran laurel forest endemic Goodyera macrophylla (Orchidaceae) is related to American orchids JF - Anales del Jardín Botánico de Madrid JA - An. Jard. Bot. Madr. VL - 78 IS - 2 SE - Articles DO - 10.3989/ajbm.2605 UR - https://rjb.revistas.csic.es/index.php/rjb/article/view/536 SP - e116 AB - <p>Macaronesian laurel forests harbour many herbs and laurophyllous trees with Mediterranean/European or Macaronesian affinities. Traditionally, the origin of these taxa has been explained by the relict hypothesis interpreting these taxa as relics of formerly widespread laurel forests in the European continent and the Mediterranean. We analysed the phylogenetic relationships of the Madeiran laurel forest endemic&nbsp;<em>Goodyera macrophylla</em>&nbsp;(Orchidaceae) using sequences from the nuclear ribosomal DNA Internal Transcribed Spacers (ITS) and plastid DNA regions. The results were incongruent, either the two Central American&nbsp;<em>G. brachyceras</em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>G. striata</em>&nbsp;(ITS) or the North American&nbsp;<em>G. oblongifolia</em>&nbsp;(plastid DNA) were sister group to&nbsp;<em>G. macrophylla</em>. Nonetheless, biogeographic analyses indicated an American origin of this nemoral laurel forest plant in the two data sets. Molecular clock analyses suggest a colonisation of Madeira in the span of the upper Miocene/lower Pliocene to the Pleistocene. Although the relict hypothesis cannot be ruled out by our data when assuming extinction events on the European and northern African mainland, dispersal from Central or North America to the archipelago of Madeira is a much more likely explanation of the data.</p> ER -