Clades:
Solanales;
Lamiidae;
Asteranae;
Angiospermae;
Plants.
TaxonomyGoetzeoideae is a Subfamily of the
Solanaceae. It has been treted in the past as a separate family Goetzeaceae
Botany:
Goetzeoideae is characterized by the presence of drupes as fruit and seeds with curved embryos and large fleshy cotyledons; chromosome number is 13.
Genera: 4 to 7; Coeloneurum, Espadaea, Goetzea, Henoonia, Tsoala of
Madagascar; Metternichia of Brazil.
Region: Cuba, Greater Antilles.
Duckeodendron Metternichia
Coeloneurum
Henoonia
Espadaea
Goetzea
Olmstead R & others; Phylogenetics of the Antillean
Goetzeoideae (
Solanaceae) and Their Relationships within the
Solanaceae based on Chloroplast and ITS DNA Sequence Data; Systematic
Botany 28, 2; DOI: 10.1043/0363-6445-28.2.452; April 2003.
Abstract
Coeloneurum, Espadaea, Henoonia, and Goetzea are shrubs and trees that are endemic to the islands of Cuba, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico in the Greater Antilles. A phylogenetic analysis was conducted to elucidate the evolutionary relationships among them and with other major lineages of the
Solanaceae. DNA sequences of the chloroplast genes ndhF, rbcL, and trnL-trnF intron and intergenic spacer were obtained for twenty two taxa and sequences of the nuclear rDNA ITS region were obtained for eight taxa comprising a data set of over 5,000 bp. The inferred phylogeny groups the Antillean genera together with the South American Metternichia and Duckeodendron in a clade within the
Solanaceae, pointing to a broader circumscription of the
Goetzeoideae. Both chloroplast and nuclear datasets find the following relationships among the Antillean taxa: (Coeloneurum (Henoonia (Espadaea, Goetzea))). The South American genera Metternichia and Duckeodendron are the first and second sister groups, respectively, to the Antillean genera. The close relationship of Metternichia to the Antillean genera also is supported by pollen morphology. Phylogenetic inference suggests that the Antillean taxa first occuppied xeric environments and evolved into more mesic habitats. Floral characteristics indicate evolution of pollination systems from nocturnal, insect-pollination in Duckeodendron and Metternichia to diurnal, bird-pollination in the Antillean genera. Duckeodendron and the Antillean genera produce drupes, but their contrasting morphology and anatomy suggest that these fruit types originated from separate evolutionary events.