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New Zealand endemic Neomyrtus is sister to New Caledonian endemic Myrtastrum (Myrtaceae, Myrteae)

August 2021

Publication: New Zealand Journal of Botany
Author(s): Smissen, Rob D. Heenan, Peter B. Maurin, Kévin J. L.

Neomyrtus is a New Zealand endemic monotypic genus that has been assigned to the Myrtaceae tribe Myrteae. Previous phylogenetic studies have placed the single species Neomyrtus pedunculata in a clade with the New Zealand endemic Lophomyrtus (subtribe Ugninae), comprising the two species L. bullata and L. obcordata. Examination of the single herbarium voucher revealed that it had been misidentified as Neomyrtus pedunculata and that it actually belongs to Lophomyrtus obcordata. We conducted a reanalysis of previously published data with new sequences from Neomyrtus and also undertook additional analyses. These new phylogenetic analyses place Neomyrtus as sister to the New Caledonian endemic genus Myrtastrum, and the two species of Lophomyrtus form a clade that is sister to the Australian endemic Lenwebbia. Neomyrtus and Lophomyrtus are not closely related within the context of the tribe. This change to the understanding of Myrteae phylogeny is discussed in terms of available morphological character data and the biogeography of the tribe. Myrtastrum is currently treated as incertae sedis at subtribal rank, but along with Neomyrtus could be considered as representing a new subtribe as our analyses suggest they are not part of any of the clades hitherto recognised as subtribes.

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