The legume genus Vigna and close relatives have highly elaborated floral morphologies that involve the coiling, bending, and intricate connection of flower parts. Banners, levers, platforms, and pumps have evolved that attract pollinators and then manipulate their movement. Given this three-dimensional floral complexity, the taxonomy of Vigna and relatives has been confounded by the study of mostly two-dimensional museum specimens. A molecular phylogenetic analysis was undertaken in the effort to resolve long-standing taxonomic questions centered on floral morphology. American Vigna clades were reassigned to the genera Ancistrotropis, Cochliasanthus, Condylostylis, Leptospron, Sigmoidotropis, and the newly described Helicotropis. Vigna sensu stricto in the Americas now includes relatively few and mostly pantropical species. Elaborate floral asymmetries are readily used to apomorphically diagnose nearly all of the American genera. The age estimates of the extant diversification of the American and its Old World sister clade are approximately coeval at ca. 6–7 million yr, which belies much greater floral variation in the Americas.
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COL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KP45ACOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KEQYUCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KT72JCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KTCRFCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KTN7VCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KVMDTCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KXZ8GCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KX2GNCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KWZ0MCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KWY5YCOL003
• DOI: 10.18730/KTYAP