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1 October 2011 Biogeographic Implications of the Striking Discovery of a 4,000 Kilometer Disjunct Population of the Wild Potato Solanum morelliforme in South America
Reinhard Simon, Alfredo F. Fuentes, David M. Spooner
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Solanum morelliforme is an epiphytic wild potato (Solanum section Petota) species widely distributed throughout central Mexico to Honduras. A strikingly disjunct (approximately 4,000 km) population was recently discovered in Bolivia, representing the first record of this species in South America, and the first species in the section growing in both North and Central America and in South America. Our maximum entropy analysis of 19 climatic variables matches the occurrence of the South American locality with great precision. It demonstrates the strong predictive quality of this procedure and suggests similar localities where this species may be found, especially along the eastern slopes of the Andes in the Yungas region of southern Peru and Bolivia. In addition, the presence of S. morelliforme in South America adds to emerging data from yet other sources to question long-held hypotheses of the origin of section Petota in North and Central America.

© Copyright 2011 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Reinhard Simon, Alfredo F. Fuentes, and David M. Spooner "Biogeographic Implications of the Striking Discovery of a 4,000 Kilometer Disjunct Population of the Wild Potato Solanum morelliforme in South America," Systematic Botany 36(4), 1062-1067, (1 October 2011). https://doi.org/10.1600/036364411X605065
Published: 1 October 2011
KEYWORDS
disjunction
MaxEnt
randomForest method
Solanum morelliforme
Wild potatoes
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