Complex interactions underlie the correlated evolution of floral traits and their association with pollinators in a clade with diverse pollination systems
Autor: | Kenneth J. Sytsma, Jeffrey P. Rose |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Pollination Flowers Quantitative trait locus 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences Pollinator Phylogenetics Polemoniaceae Adaptive radiation Genetics Animals Selection Genetic Clade Phylogeny Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Natural selection biology fungi food and beverages biology.organism_classification Biological Evolution Phenotype 030104 developmental biology Evolutionary biology General Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ericales |
Zdroj: | Evolution. 75:1431-1449 |
ISSN: | 1558-5646 0014-3820 |
Popis: | Natural selection by pollinators is an important factor in the morphological diversity and adaptive radiation of flowering plants. Selection by similar pollinators in unrelated plants leads to convergence in floral morphology, or "floral syndromes." Previous investigations into floral syndromes have mostly studied relatively small and/or simple systems, emphasizing vertebrate pollination. Despite the importance of multiple floral traits in plant-pollinator interactions, these studies have examined few quantitative traits, so their co-variation and phenotypic integration have been underexplored. To gain better insights into pollinator-trait dynamics, we investigate the model system of the phlox family (Polemoniaceae), a clade of ∼400 species pollinated by a diversity of vectors. Using a comprehensive phylogeny and large dataset of traits and observations of pollinators, we reconstruct ancestral pollination system, accounting for the temporal history of pollinators. We conduct phylogenetically controlled analyses of trait co-variation and association with pollinators, integrating many analyses over phylogenetic uncertainty. Pollinator shifts are more heterogeneous than previously hypothesized. The evolution of floral traits is partially constrained by phylogenetic history and trait co-variation, but traits are convergent and differences are associated with different pollinators. Trait shifts are usually gradual, rather than rapid, suggesting complex genetic and ecological interactions of flowers at macroevolutionary scales. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |