TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolution of floral traits and impact of reproductive mode on diversification in the phlox family (Polemoniaceae)
AU - Landis, Jacob B.
AU - Bell, Charles D.
AU - Hernandez, Margarita
AU - Zenil-Ferguson, Rosana
AU - McCarthy, Elizabeth W.
AU - Soltis, Douglas E.
AU - Soltis, Pamela S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - Pollinator-mediated selection is a major driver of evolution in flowering plants, contributing to the vast diversity of floral features. Despite long-standing interest in floral variation and the evolution of pollination syndromes in Polemoniaceae, the evolution of floral traits and known pollinators has not been investigated in an explicit phylogenetic context. Here we explore macroevolutionary patterns of both pollinator specificity and three floral traits long considered important determinants of pollinator attraction across the most comprehensive species-level phylogenetic tree yet produced for the family. The presence of floral chlorophyll is reconstructed as the ancestral character state of the family, even though the presence of floral anthocyanins is the most prevalent floral pigment in extant taxa. Mean corolla length and width of the opening of the floral tube are correlated, and both appear to vary with pollinator type. The evolution of pollination systems appears labile, with multiple gains and losses of selfing and conflicting implications for patterns of diversification. Explicit testing of diversification models rejects the hypothesis that selfing is an evolutionary dead-end. This study begins to disentangle the individual components that comprise pollination syndromes and lays the foundation for future work on the genetic mechanisms that control each trait.
AB - Pollinator-mediated selection is a major driver of evolution in flowering plants, contributing to the vast diversity of floral features. Despite long-standing interest in floral variation and the evolution of pollination syndromes in Polemoniaceae, the evolution of floral traits and known pollinators has not been investigated in an explicit phylogenetic context. Here we explore macroevolutionary patterns of both pollinator specificity and three floral traits long considered important determinants of pollinator attraction across the most comprehensive species-level phylogenetic tree yet produced for the family. The presence of floral chlorophyll is reconstructed as the ancestral character state of the family, even though the presence of floral anthocyanins is the most prevalent floral pigment in extant taxa. Mean corolla length and width of the opening of the floral tube are correlated, and both appear to vary with pollinator type. The evolution of pollination systems appears labile, with multiple gains and losses of selfing and conflicting implications for patterns of diversification. Explicit testing of diversification models rejects the hypothesis that selfing is an evolutionary dead-end. This study begins to disentangle the individual components that comprise pollination syndromes and lays the foundation for future work on the genetic mechanisms that control each trait.
KW - Comparative methods
KW - Diversification
KW - Flower color
KW - MuSSE
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Pollinator-mediated selection
KW - Stochastic mapping
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.035
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.06.035
M3 - Article
C2 - 29958983
AN - SCOPUS:85049328349
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 127
SP - 878
EP - 890
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
ER -