Profile of a flower: How rates of morphological evolution drive floral diversification in Ericales and angiosperms

Author:

Herting Julian1ORCID,Schönenberger Jürg2ORCID,Sauquet Hervé13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Herbarium of New South Wales Botanic Gardens Sydney Locked Bag 6002 Mount Annan NSW 2567 Australia

2. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research University of Vienna Rennweg 14 Vienna A‐1030 Austria

3. Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

Abstract

AbstractPremiseRecent studies of floral disparity in the asterid order Ericales have shown that flowers vary strongly among families and that disparity is unequally distributed between the three flower modules (perianth, androecium, gynoecium). However, it remains unknown whether these patterns are driven by heterogeneous rates of morphological evolution or other factors.MethodsHere, we compiled a data set of 33 floral characters scored for 414 species of Ericales sampled from 346 genera and all 22 families. We conducted ancestral state reconstructions using an equal‐rates Markov model for each character. We estimated rates of morphological evolution for Ericales and for a separate angiosperm‐wide data set of 19 characters and 792 species, creating “rate profiles” for Ericales, angiosperms, and major angiosperm subclades. We compared morphological rates among flower modules within each data set separately and between data sets, and we compared rates among angiosperm subclades using the angiosperm data set.ResultsThe androecium exhibits the highest evolutionary rates across most characters, whereas most perianth and gynoecium characters evolve more slowly in both Ericales and angiosperms. Both high and low rates of morphological evolution can result in high floral disparity in Ericales. Analyses of an angiosperm‐wide floral data set reveal that this pattern appears to be conserved across most major angiosperm clades.ConclusionsElevated rates of morphological evolution in the androecium of Ericales may explain the higher disparity reported for this floral module. Comparing rates of morphological evolution through rate profiles proves to be a powerful tool in understanding floral evolution.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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