Stenocereus pruinosus

Alvarado-Sizzo, Hernán, Casas, Alejandro, Parra, Fabiola, Arreola-Nava, Hilda Julieta, Terrazas, Teresa & Sánchez, Cristian, 2018, Species delimitation in the Stenocereus griseus (Cactaceae) species complex reveals a new species, S. huastecorum, PLoS ONE (e 0190385) 13 (1), pp. 1-25 : 19

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pone.0190385

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12986460

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0398344D-FFA1-476C-FDA2-9AE44256FA09

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Stenocereus pruinosus
status

 

Stenocereus pruinosus View in CoL in central Mexico

Genetic delimitation fully supports the statements by Parra et al. [ 16] about population clusters in northern Mexico (the Huasteca group) and the eastern Tehuantepec Isthmus (the Chiapas group) as species different to S. pruinosus . Moreover, our study confirmed that the latter has a north-south substructure (green shades clusters in the Geneland column in Fig 2 View Fig 2 ) which corresponds to the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley and the Oaxaca Central Valleys .

S. pruinosus is separated from S. huastecorum by a genetic barrier, consistent with the TMVB, and is separated from S. laevigatus by a second barrier represented by the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, a well-known biogeographic barrier ( Fig 3 View Fig 3 ). We did not observe genetic evidence of populations or individuals of S. pruinosus occurring in northern Mexico. Therefore, we do not consider a sympatric scenario between S. pruinosus and S. huastecorum in northern Mexico, but rather a long record of misidentified specimens.

Ecological evidence also provides clear distinction of S. pruinosus ENMs from those of S. huastecorum and S. laevigatus given that their comparisons ( Fig 5 View Fig 5 , Table 2 View Table 2 ) suggest that these species have different ecological niches. Even though areolar morphology can easily distinguish S. pruinosus from S. huastecorum (every variable measured in Fig 6 View Fig 6 ) only spine numbers ( Fig 6E and 6F View Fig 6 ) were able to distinguish S. pruinosus from S. laevigatus . Areolar characters, however, may be confusing if developmental features are not taken into account because areolas may lose spines because of flowering events and branch age, or it may be simply deciduous as in central-left and right spines of S. laevigatus . Poor morphological differentiation is clearly related to the fact that this species pair shows the least interspecific genetic distance (Nei’s

D = 0.156). This suggests a recent divergence event, which involves the Isthmus of Tehuantepec constraining the distributional range of S. pruinosus to the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán and Oaxaca Central Valleys .

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