supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China,key international(regional)cooperative research project(No.31720103903);the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences(No.XDB310o000o);the Science and Technology Basic Resources Investigation Program of China(No.2019FY100900);the Large-scale Scientific Facilities of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(No.2017-LSF-GBOWS-02);the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.31270274);the Yunling International High-end Experts Program of Yunnan Province,China(No.YNQR-GDWG-2017-002 and No.YNQR-GDWG-2018-012);the CAS President's International Fellowship Initiative(No.2020PBo009);the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation(CPSF)International Postdoctoral Exchange Program,and the CAS Special Research Assistant Project;supported in part by USA Department of Energy grant DE-SCo018247.We are grateful to the following institutes for providing specimens or silica-dried materials:Herbarium of Kunming Institute of Botany,Chinese Academy of Sciences;the Germplasm Bank of Wild Species in the Southwest China and Molecular Biology Experiment Center,Kunming Institute of Botany,Chinese Academy of Sciences;the herbarium of the California Academy of Sciences;the Harvard University Herbaria;University of Texas at Austin Herbarium;The Ohio State University Herbarium;National Herbarium of the Netherlands;and the herbaria of the Royal Botanic Gardens,Kew,the Missouri Botanical Garden,the New York Botanical Garden,the San Francisco Botanical Garden,and the California Botanical Garden.We are also grateful to Prof.Susanne S.Renner for providing Cannabaceae materials;to Jiajin Wu for help with sampling;to Prof.Huafeng Wang,Dr.Diego F.Morales-Briones,Dr.Nelson Zamora Villalobos,Dr.Rong Zhang,Dr.Hui Liu,Siyun Chen,Chenxuan Yang,Yingying Yang,and Henrique Borges Zamengo for their generous technical support and necessary assistance;and to the iFlora High Performance Computing Center of Germplasm Bank of Wild Species(iFlora HPC Center of GBOWS,KIB,CAS)for computing.
Cannabaceae are a relatively small family of angiosperms,but they include several species of huge economic and cultural significance:marijuana or hemp(Cannabis sativa)and hops(Humulus lupulus).Previous phylogenetic st...
supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant Nos.31900188,31970225);Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province(Grant No.LY19C030007).
Celtis is a Cannabaceae genus of 60e70 species of trees,or rarely shrubs,commonly known as hackberries.This woody genus consists of very valuable forest plants that provide important wildlife habitat for birds and mam...
This work was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China(key international(regional)cooperative research project No.31720103903);the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences(XDB31000000);the Large-scale Scientific Facilities of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(No.2017-LSF-GBOWS-02);the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Project No.31270274).
Dispersal scenarios have been favored over tectonic vicariance as an explanation for disjunct distributions in many plant taxa during the last two decades.However,this argument has been insufficiently addressed in cos...
supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China;key international (regional) cooperative research project (31720103903);The Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDPB0201)
Cannabaceae is an economically important family that includes ten genera and ca. 117 accepted species.To explore the structure and size variation of their plastomes, we sequenced ten plastomes representing all ten gen...