The role of polyploidy, particularly allopolyploidy, in plant diversification is a subject of debate. Whole-genome duplications precede the origins of many major clades (e.g., angiosperms, Brassicaceae, Poaceae), suggesting that polyploidy drives diversification. However, theoretical arguments and empirical studies suggest that polyploid lineages may actually have lower speciation rates and higher extinction rates than diploid lineages. We focus here on the grass tribe Andropogoneae, an economically and ecologically important group of C 4 species with a high frequency of polyploids. A phylogeny was constructed for ca. 10% of the species of the clade, based on sequences of four concatenated low-copy nuclear loci. Genetic allopolyploidy was documented using the characteristic pattern of double-labeled gene trees. At least 32% of the species sampled are the result of genetic allopolyploidy and result from 28 distinct tetraploidy events plus an additional six hexaploidy events. This number is a minimum, and the actual frequency could be considerably higher. The parental genomes of most Andropogoneae polyploids diverged in the Late Miocene coincident with the expansion of the major C 4 grasslands that dominate the earth today. The well-documented whole-genome duplication in Zea mays ssp. mays occurred after the divergence of Zea and Sorghum. We find no evidence that polyploidization is followed by an increase in net diversification rate; nonetheless, allopolyploidy itself is a major mode of speciation. P olyploidy (whole-genome duplication) is often linked with the acquisition of new traits and subsequent species diversification, particularly in plants (1, 2). Ancient polyploidy correlates with major land-plant radiations (3) and the origins of orders, large families, and major clades (4-7) although, in many cases, sharp changes in diversification rates are delayed for millions of years after the polyploidization event (1). This phylogenetic pattern has led to the hypothesis that polyploidy causes or promotes diversification. Good mechanistic reasons support such a hypothesis. Studies of naturally occurring and synthetic polyploids find changes in gene expression, gene loss, release of transposons, and changes in morphology and physiology immediately after polyploidy (4,(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)). This pattern is particularly true for allopolyploids, which originate from a cross between genetically distinct parents often representing different species; in such cases, the biological changes seen after polyploidization may not reflect the effects of genome doubling per se, but rather the effect of hybridization between distantly related progenitors (4).Despite the appeal of the hypothesis that polyploidy causes diversification, there is evidence to the contrary. As noted by Stebbins (13), "polyploidy has been important in the diversification of species and genera within families, but not in the origin of the families and orders themselves," implying that polyploidy is only a minor force in diversification (see also ref. 14). ...
Systems for collecting image data in conjunction with computer vision techniques are a powerful tool for increasing the temporal resolution at which plant phenotypes can be measured non-destructively. Computational tools that are flexible and extendable are needed to address the diversity of plant phenotyping problems. We previously described the Plant Computer Vision (PlantCV) software package, which is an image processing toolkit for plant phenotyping analysis. The goal of the PlantCV project is to develop a set of modular, reusable, and repurposable tools for plant image analysis that are open-source and community-developed. Here we present the details and rationale for major developments in the second major release of PlantCV. In addition to overall improvements in the organization of the PlantCV project, new functionality includes a set of new image processing and normalization tools, support for analyzing images that include multiple plants, leaf segmentation, landmark identification tools for morphometrics, and modules for machine learning.
The AZ in Setaria is developmentally and anatomically different from that characterized in rice, barley, and many eudicots. In particular, no set of small, densely cytoplasmic cells is obvious. This difference in anatomy could point to differential genetic control of the structure.
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