Premium
Evolution of reproductive structures in grasses (Poaceae) inferred by sister‐group comparison with their putative closest living relatives, Ecdeiocoleaceae
Author(s) -
Rudall Paula J.,
Stuppy Wolfgang,
Cunniff Jennifer,
Kellogg Elizabeth A.,
Briggs Barbara G.
Publication year - 2005
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.92.9.1432
Subject(s) - biology , perianth , stamen , synapomorphy , botany , sister group , ndhf , gynoecium , whorl (mollusc) , evolutionary biology , pollen , phylogenetics , genus , clade , genetics , gene
Despite much recent activity in the phylogeny and developmental genetics of grasses, the enigmatic homologies of their reproductive structures remain largely unresolved, partly because their highly derived morphology has resulted in a unique associated terminology. Outstanding questions include whether grass lodicules and stamens are derived from a single perianth or stamen whorl, respectively, whether the grass caryopsis is homologous with a nut, and how the scutellum evolved. We investigated the reproductive structures of the putative sister group of grasses, the southwestern Australian family Ecdeiocoleaceae, which includes two genera, Ecdeiocolea and Georgeantha . The zygomorphic arrangement of the four (rather than six) stamens in male flowers of Ecdeiocolea indicates that they may represent three outer stamens plus the adaxial inner stamen. Within Ecdeiocoleaceae, characters such as the highly unusual nucellus structure of Ecdeiocolea are autapomorphic. Sister‐group comparisons indicate that some characteristic grass features, notably the scutellum, do not occur in their putative closest relatives and that more data are needed on early‐diverging grass genera to resolve these issues. The grass caryopsis could represent one end of a transformation series embodied by the reduced gynoecial structure and indehiscent fruit of other Poales such as Flagellaria , Joinvillea , and Ecdeiocolea .