2012
DOI: 10.1086/665821
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Growth Form Evolution in Piperales and Its Relevance for Understanding Angiosperm Diversification: An Integrative Approach Combining Plant Architecture, Anatomy, and Biomechanics

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Cited by 60 publications
(72 citation statements)
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“…One possibility is the recently described Saururus tuckerae, a plant whose modern counterpart grows today extensively along marginal aquatic zones. Stem anatomy, leaves, and wood anatomical structure of extant Saururus bear some reasonable similarities to Eorhiza Carlquist et al 1995;Carlquist 2009Carlquist , 2013Isnard et al 2012;Trueba et al 2015). A reassessment of these and some other Princeton chert plants, in light of recent knowledge about phylogenies, may help us better understand the plants that grew in this Eocene wetlands of the Okanagan Highlands and the paleoenvironment they represent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…One possibility is the recently described Saururus tuckerae, a plant whose modern counterpart grows today extensively along marginal aquatic zones. Stem anatomy, leaves, and wood anatomical structure of extant Saururus bear some reasonable similarities to Eorhiza Carlquist et al 1995;Carlquist 2009Carlquist , 2013Isnard et al 2012;Trueba et al 2015). A reassessment of these and some other Princeton chert plants, in light of recent knowledge about phylogenies, may help us better understand the plants that grew in this Eocene wetlands of the Okanagan Highlands and the paleoenvironment they represent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The model of lianas as fast-growing, disturbanceloving plants emerges largely from the function of eudicot and magnoliid angiosperms. However, lianescence has evolved in other clades (Carlquist 1991;Feild & Wilson 2012;Isnard et al 2012;Feild and Isnard 2013) with older divergence ages (Magallón & Castillo 2009). New discoveries about xylem structure and function in climbers among extant lineages diverging near the root of angiosperms show that these climbers function differently from the common view of fast-growing, light-loving lianas.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…belonging to the same species and population, should show different observable characteristics, which can range from morphological or physiological to developmental and behavioural properties as a response to different environmental conditions [7,42]. Nevertheless, plant-environment interactions can be both complex and numerous, producing a continuum of growth form variations, where an absolute 'description' or 'categorization' is often difficult to provide [1,16,18,25]. While some plant species such as poison oak [9] can be clear-cut examples of phenotypic plasticity producing two contrasting growth forms (lianas versus shrubs), other species within the continuum of growth form variations can present finer plastic responses within individual growth form types.…”
Section: Can We Assume Growth Form Plasticity Inmentioning
confidence: 99%