Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera. / Grace, Olwen Megan; Buerki, Sven; Symonds, Matthew RE; Forest, Félix; van Wyk, Abraham E; Smith, Gideon; Klopper, Ronell R.; Bjora, Charlotte S; Neale, Sophie; Sebsebe, Demissew; Simmonds, Monique SJ; Rønsted, Nina.

In: B M C Evolutionary Biology, Vol. 15, 29, 2015.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Grace, OM, Buerki, S, Symonds, MRE, Forest, F, van Wyk, AE, Smith, G, Klopper, RR, Bjora, CS, Neale, S, Sebsebe, D, Simmonds, MSJ & Rønsted, N 2015, 'Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera', B M C Evolutionary Biology, vol. 15, 29. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7

APA

Grace, O. M., Buerki, S., Symonds, M. RE., Forest, F., van Wyk, A. E., Smith, G., Klopper, R. R., Bjora, C. S., Neale, S., Sebsebe, D., Simmonds, M. SJ., & Rønsted, N. (2015). Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera. B M C Evolutionary Biology, 15, [29]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7

Vancouver

Grace OM, Buerki S, Symonds MRE, Forest F, van Wyk AE, Smith G et al. Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera. B M C Evolutionary Biology. 2015;15. 29. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7

Author

Grace, Olwen Megan ; Buerki, Sven ; Symonds, Matthew RE ; Forest, Félix ; van Wyk, Abraham E ; Smith, Gideon ; Klopper, Ronell R. ; Bjora, Charlotte S ; Neale, Sophie ; Sebsebe, Demissew ; Simmonds, Monique SJ ; Rønsted, Nina. / Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera. In: B M C Evolutionary Biology. 2015 ; Vol. 15.

Bibtex

@article{6740f33e4b5048f6b8ec5d95776500b4,
title = "Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera",
abstract = "Background: Aloe vera supports a substantial global trade yet its wild origins, and explanations for its popularity over 500 related Aloe species in one of the world{\textquoteright}s largest succulent groups, have remained uncertain. We developed an explicit phylogenetic framework to explore links between the rich traditions of medicinal use and leaf succulence in aloes.Results: The phylogenetic hypothesis clarifies the origins of Aloe vera to the Arabian Peninsula at the northernmost limits of the range for aloes. The genus Aloe originated in southern Africa ~16 million years ago and underwent two major radiations driven by different speciation processes, giving rise to the extraordinary diversity known today. Large, succulent leaves typical of medicinal aloes arose during the most recent diversification ~10 million years ago and are strongly correlated to the phylogeny and to the likelihood of a species being used for medicine. A significant, albeit weak, phylogenetic signal is evident in the medicinal uses of aloes, suggesting that the properties for which they are valued do not occur randomly across the branches of the phylogenetic tree. Conclusions: Phylogenetic investigation of plant use and leaf succulence among aloes has yielded new explanations for the extraordinary market dominance of Aloe vera. The industry preference for Aloe vera appears to be due to its proximity to important historic trade routes, and early introduction to trade and cultivation. Well-developed succulent leaf mesophyll tissue, an adaptive feature that likely contributed to the ecological success of the genus Aloe, is the main predictor for medicinal use among Aloe species, whereas evolutionary losses of succulence tend to be associated with losses of medicinal use. Phylogenetic analyses of plant use offer potential to understand patterns in the value of global plant diversity.",
author = "Grace, {Olwen Megan} and Sven Buerki and Symonds, {Matthew RE} and F{\'e}lix Forest and {van Wyk}, {Abraham E} and Gideon Smith and Klopper, {Ronell R.} and Bjora, {Charlotte S} and Sophie Neale and Demissew Sebsebe and Simmonds, {Monique SJ} and Nina R{\o}nsted",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
journal = "B M C Evolutionary Biology",
issn = "1471-2148",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evolutionary history and leaf succulence as explanations for medicinal use in aloes and the global popularity of Aloe vera

AU - Grace, Olwen Megan

AU - Buerki, Sven

AU - Symonds, Matthew RE

AU - Forest, Félix

AU - van Wyk, Abraham E

AU - Smith, Gideon

AU - Klopper, Ronell R.

AU - Bjora, Charlotte S

AU - Neale, Sophie

AU - Sebsebe, Demissew

AU - Simmonds, Monique SJ

AU - Rønsted, Nina

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Background: Aloe vera supports a substantial global trade yet its wild origins, and explanations for its popularity over 500 related Aloe species in one of the world’s largest succulent groups, have remained uncertain. We developed an explicit phylogenetic framework to explore links between the rich traditions of medicinal use and leaf succulence in aloes.Results: The phylogenetic hypothesis clarifies the origins of Aloe vera to the Arabian Peninsula at the northernmost limits of the range for aloes. The genus Aloe originated in southern Africa ~16 million years ago and underwent two major radiations driven by different speciation processes, giving rise to the extraordinary diversity known today. Large, succulent leaves typical of medicinal aloes arose during the most recent diversification ~10 million years ago and are strongly correlated to the phylogeny and to the likelihood of a species being used for medicine. A significant, albeit weak, phylogenetic signal is evident in the medicinal uses of aloes, suggesting that the properties for which they are valued do not occur randomly across the branches of the phylogenetic tree. Conclusions: Phylogenetic investigation of plant use and leaf succulence among aloes has yielded new explanations for the extraordinary market dominance of Aloe vera. The industry preference for Aloe vera appears to be due to its proximity to important historic trade routes, and early introduction to trade and cultivation. Well-developed succulent leaf mesophyll tissue, an adaptive feature that likely contributed to the ecological success of the genus Aloe, is the main predictor for medicinal use among Aloe species, whereas evolutionary losses of succulence tend to be associated with losses of medicinal use. Phylogenetic analyses of plant use offer potential to understand patterns in the value of global plant diversity.

AB - Background: Aloe vera supports a substantial global trade yet its wild origins, and explanations for its popularity over 500 related Aloe species in one of the world’s largest succulent groups, have remained uncertain. We developed an explicit phylogenetic framework to explore links between the rich traditions of medicinal use and leaf succulence in aloes.Results: The phylogenetic hypothesis clarifies the origins of Aloe vera to the Arabian Peninsula at the northernmost limits of the range for aloes. The genus Aloe originated in southern Africa ~16 million years ago and underwent two major radiations driven by different speciation processes, giving rise to the extraordinary diversity known today. Large, succulent leaves typical of medicinal aloes arose during the most recent diversification ~10 million years ago and are strongly correlated to the phylogeny and to the likelihood of a species being used for medicine. A significant, albeit weak, phylogenetic signal is evident in the medicinal uses of aloes, suggesting that the properties for which they are valued do not occur randomly across the branches of the phylogenetic tree. Conclusions: Phylogenetic investigation of plant use and leaf succulence among aloes has yielded new explanations for the extraordinary market dominance of Aloe vera. The industry preference for Aloe vera appears to be due to its proximity to important historic trade routes, and early introduction to trade and cultivation. Well-developed succulent leaf mesophyll tissue, an adaptive feature that likely contributed to the ecological success of the genus Aloe, is the main predictor for medicinal use among Aloe species, whereas evolutionary losses of succulence tend to be associated with losses of medicinal use. Phylogenetic analyses of plant use offer potential to understand patterns in the value of global plant diversity.

U2 - 10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7

DO - 10.1186/s12862-015-0291-7

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25879886

VL - 15

JO - B M C Evolutionary Biology

JF - B M C Evolutionary Biology

SN - 1471-2148

M1 - 29

ER -

ID: 130109551