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Get the shovel: morphological and evolutionary complexities of belowground organs in geophytes
Author(s) -
Tribble Carrie M.,
MartínezGómez Jesús,
Howard Cody Coyotee,
Males Jamie,
Sosa Victoria,
Sessa Emily B.,
Cellinese Nico,
Specht Chelsea D.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/ajb2.1623
Subject(s) - biology , habit , adaptation (eye) , diversification (marketing strategy) , ecology , tree of life (biology) , taxon , morphology (biology) , evolutionary biology , botany , zoology , phylogenetics , psychology , biochemistry , marketing , neuroscience , gene , business , psychotherapist
Herbaceous plants collectively known as geophytes, which regrow from belowground buds, are distributed around the globe and throughout the land plant tree of life. The geophytic habit is an evolutionarily and ecologically important growth form in plants, permitting novel life history strategies, enabling the occupation of more seasonal climates, mediating interactions between plants and their water and nutrient resources, and influencing macroevolutionary patterns by enabling differential diversification and adaptation. These taxa are excellent study systems for understanding how convergence on a similar growth habit (i.e., geophytism) can occur via different morphological and developmental mechanisms. Despite the importance of belowground organs for characterizing whole‐plant morphological diversity, the morphology and evolution of these organs have been vastly understudied with most research focusing on only a few crop systems. Here, we clarify the terminology commonly used (and sometimes misused) to describe geophytes and their underground organs and highlight key evolutionary patterns of the belowground morphology of geophytic plants. Additionally, we advocate for increasing resources for geophyte research and implementing standardized ontological definitions of geophytic organs to improve our understanding of the factors controlling, promoting, and maintaining geophyte diversity.

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