Adaptive associations among life history, reproductive traits, environment, and origin in the Wisconsin angiosperm flora
Autor: | Thomas J. Givnish, Daniel Spalink, Ricardo Kriebel, Kenneth M. Cameron, Kenneth J. Sytsma, John G. Zaborsky, Jeffrey P. Rose, Donald M. Waller |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
media_common.quotation_subject Dioecy Seed dispersal Introduced species Flowers Plant Science Biology 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Magnoliopsida Wisconsin Genetics Pollination Reproductive History Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics media_common Ecology fungi food and beverages Mating system Plant Breeding Habitat Anemophily Biological dispersal Habit 010606 plant biology & botany |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Botany. 107:1677-1692 |
ISSN: | 1537-2197 0002-9122 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ajb2.1578 |
Popis: | PREMISE We tested 25 classic and novel hypotheses regarding trait-origin, trait-trait, and trait-environment relationships to account for flora-wide variation in life history, habit, and especially reproductive traits using a plastid DNA phylogeny of most native (96.6%, or 1494/1547 species) and introduced (87.5%, or 690/789 species) angiosperms in Wisconsin, USA. METHODS We assembled data on life history, habit, flowering, dispersal, mating system, and occurrence across open/closed/mixed habitats across species in the state phylogeny. We used phylogenetically structured analyses to assess the strength and statistical significance of associations predicted by our models. RESULTS Introduced species are more likely to be annual herbs, occupy open habitats, have large, visually conspicuous, hermaphroditic flowers, and bear passively dispersed seeds. Among native species, hermaphroditism is associated with larger, more conspicuous flowers; monoecy is associated with small, inconspicuous flowers and passive seed dispersal; and dioecy is associated with small, inconspicuous flowers and fleshy fruits. Larger flowers with more conspicuous colors are more common in open habitats, and in understory species flowering under open (spring) canopies; fleshy fruits are more common in closed habitats. Wind pollination may help favor dioecy in open habitats. CONCLUSIONS These findings support predictions regarding how breeding systems depend on flower size, flower color, and fruit type, and how those traits depend on habitat. This study is the first to combine flora-wide phylogenies with complete trait databases and phylogenetically structured analyses to provide powerful tests of evolutionary hypotheses about reproductive traits and their variation with geographic source, each other, and environmental conditions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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