Evolution of reproductive traits and selfing syndrome in the sub-endemic Mediterranean genus Centaurium Hill (Gentianaceae)

Author:

Jiménez-Lobato Vania1,Escudero Marcial1ORCID,Díaz Lifante Zoila1,Andrés Camacho Cristina1,de Castro Alejandra1,Mansion Guilhem2,Zeltner Louis3,Arroyo Juan1

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología, Facultad de Biología, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain

2. Freelance writer, Zurich, Switzerland

3. Laboratoire de Botanique Evolutive, Université de Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract In flowering plants, the shift from outcrossing to selfing is associated with a set of correlated changes in morphological and reproductive features known as the ‘selfing syndrome’. Species of the sub-endemic Mediterranean genus Centaurium Hill (Gentianaceae) exhibit a wide array of flower traits related to pollination biology and different ploidy levels. We explored if the evolutionary transitions of seven flower traits and life cycle, typically associated with the selfing syndrome, are related to polyploidy, diversification patterns, divergence times and the geological and climatic history of the Mediterranean Basin. Using 26 species of Centaurium we reconstructed a phylogenetic tree, inferred the ancestral states of the selected traits, estimated their phylogenetic signal and tested the correlative evolution among them. We found a significant increase in diversification rates during the Quaternary. Anther length, flower size, herkogamy and polyploidy undergo rapid state transitions without phylogenetic signal that could be the result of adaptation for selfing. Changes in character states do not show evidence of correlative evolution among them, as would be predicted during the evolution of selfing syndrome. The evolution of reproductive traits in Centaurium has probably relied on a more diverse array of drivers than just reproductive assurance or polyploidy events.

Funder

CONACYT

University of Seville

MINECO

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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