Inherit the wind: evolution of reproductive traits in Cyperaceae

Author:

Chaves Ana Luisa Arantes1ORCID,da Costa Ana Carolina Galindo2,Machado Isabel Cristina3,Morokawa Rosemeri4,Thomas William Wayt5,Costa Suzana Maria1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Federal University of Lavras (UFLA) , Lavras, MG , Brazil

2. Vale Technological Institute , Belém, PA , Brazil

3. Center for Biological Sciences, Department of Botany, Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE) , Pernambuco, PE , Brazil

4. Institute of Biology, Department of Botany – State University of Campinas (Unicamp) , Campinas, SP , Brazil

5. The New York Botanical Garden , Bronx, NY , USA

Abstract

Abstract Studies about reproductive aspects of angiosperms rarely refer to herbaceous and anemophilous groups. Cyperaceae are cosmopolitan and diverse in terms of sexuality, inflorescence architecture, and pollination modes, such as anemophily, entomophily, and ambophily. Therefore, the evolution of reproductive traits can clarify some questions about the reproductive biology of angiosperms, especially regarding the transitions between biotic and abiotic pollination. This study was designed to investigate the evolution of reproductive traits in Cyperaceae through comparative phylogenetic methods, such as reconstruction of ancestral states and evolutionary correlation. If spicoids in Mapanioideae are indeed inflorescences, the bisexual flower in Cyperaceae would be derived, a rare case in angiosperms. In Cyperoideae, a decrease in the number of flowers and an increase in stamen loss events were observed. This result contradicts the hypothesized increase in reproductive structures in anemophilous species, in which a greater amount of pollen is produced to compensate for the waste generated by wind. Only one correlation was found: between the number of inflorescence branches and the number of reproductive units per inflorescence. Finally, the analyses showed the great diversity of reproductive biology in Cyperaceae and made evident the need to expand the theoretical studies to refine the discovery of correlated traits.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference145 articles.

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3. Mutualists and antagonists drive among-population variation in selection and evolution of floral display in a perennial herb;Ågren,2013

4. The evolution of plant sexual diversity;Barrett,2002

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