2015
DOI: 10.1111/nph.13517
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Bridging the gaps: evolution and development of perianth fusion

Abstract: 330I.330II.331III.332IV.333334References334 Summary One of the most striking innovations in flower development is the congenital or postgenital union of petals (sympetaly) which has enabled dramatic specialization in flower structure and possibly accelerated speciation rates. Sympetalous flowers exhibit extraordinary variation in development, including the degree and timing of fusion, and fusion with other floral organs. Different axes of corolla tube complexity can be disentangled at the developmental level… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(200 reference statements)
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“…For example, delayed selfing occurred in a Clematis species (Ranunculaceae) with tubular flowers and a specialized bee pollination syndrome, whereas its outcrossing congener had open flowers and more generalist pollination (Jiang et al, 2010). As broad evidence, we point to a prevalence of fused corollas (30 genera with fused vs. 21 with free petals, consistent with the trend for a high frequency of asterids), which are thought to be associated with pollinator specialization (Wernham, Goodwillie et al, 2004 (continued) 1911; Faegri and Van Der Pijl, 1979;Zhong and Preston, 2015). Furthermore, a single pollinator functional group (e.g., hummingbirds, moths, bees) was reported in 27 of 60 species for which we found any pollinator information.…”
Section: Patterns and Distribution Of Delayed Selfing In Angiospermssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…For example, delayed selfing occurred in a Clematis species (Ranunculaceae) with tubular flowers and a specialized bee pollination syndrome, whereas its outcrossing congener had open flowers and more generalist pollination (Jiang et al, 2010). As broad evidence, we point to a prevalence of fused corollas (30 genera with fused vs. 21 with free petals, consistent with the trend for a high frequency of asterids), which are thought to be associated with pollinator specialization (Wernham, Goodwillie et al, 2004 (continued) 1911; Faegri and Van Der Pijl, 1979;Zhong and Preston, 2015). Furthermore, a single pollinator functional group (e.g., hummingbirds, moths, bees) was reported in 27 of 60 species for which we found any pollinator information.…”
Section: Patterns and Distribution Of Delayed Selfing In Angiospermssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…Along with the fact that mutations in boundary genes of many taxa often have no impact on petal fusion (Weir et al ., ; Aida and Tasaka, ,; Takeda et al ., ), our data suggest that the mechanism of organ boundary formation is quite different between petals and other lateral organs. Thus, the expectation that sympetaly results from the regional ‘turning‐off’ of known organ boundary genes (Zhong and Preston, ; Rebocho et al ., ), might be somewhat naïve.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Along with the fact that mutations in boundary genes of many taxa often have no impact on petal fusion (Weir et al, 2004;Tasaka, 2006a,2006b;Takeda et al, 2011), our data suggest that the mechanism of organ boundary formation is quite different between petals and other lateral organs. Thus, the expectation that sympetaly results from the regional 'turning-off' of known organ boundary genes (Zhong and Preston, 2015;Rebocho et al, 2017), might be somewhat na€ ıve. Petal growth is best characterized in A. thaliana and occurs through the establishment of a distal, auxin-mediated polarity field that increases growth rates towards the distal end of the petal, resulting in the characteristic spoonshaped appearance (Sauret-Gueto et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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