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Phylogenetic reconstruction of the evolution of stylar polymorphisms in Narcissus (Amaryllidaceae)
Author(s) -
Graham Sean W.,
Barrett Spencer C. H.
Publication year - 2004
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 - 10.3732/ajb.91.7.1007
Subject(s) - biology , narcissus , sexual dimorphism , phylogenetic tree , perianth , amaryllidaceae , evolutionary biology , botany , zoology , genetics , pollen , stamen , gene
We investigated the origin of stylar polymorphisms in Narcissus , which possesses a remarkable range of stylar conditions and diverse types of floral morphology and pollination biology. Reconstruction of evolutionary change was complicated by incomplete resolution of trees inferred from two rapidly evolving chloroplast regions, but we bracketed reconstructions expected on the fully resolved plastid‐based tree by considering all possible resolutions of polytomies on the shortest trees. Stigma‐height dimorphism likely arose on several occasions in Narcissus and persisted across multiple speciation events. As proposed in published models, this rare type of stylar polymorphism is ancestral to distyly. While there is no evidence in Narcissus that dimorphism preceded tristyly, a rapid transition between them may explain the lack of a phylogenetic footprint for this evolutionary sequence. The single instances of distyly and tristyly in Narcissus albimarginatus and N. triandrus , respectively, are clearly not homologous, an evolutionary convergence unique to Amaryllidaceae. Floral morphology was likely an important trigger for the evolution of stylar polymorphisms: Concentrated‐changes tests indicate that a long, narrow floral tube may have been associated with the emergence of stigma‐height dimorphism and that this type of tube, in combination with a deep corona, likely promoted, or at least was associated with, the parallel origins of heterostyly.

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