Fifteen clues to the early diversification of flowers: first results from the eFLOWER initiative

Author(s)
Hervé Sauquet, Anna Maria Louise von Balthazar-Schönenberger, Susana Magallon, James A. Doyle, Peter K. Endress, Emily Bailes, Erica Barroso de Morais, Kester Bull-Herenu, Laetitia Carrive, Marion Chartier, Guillaume Chomicki, Mario Coiro, Juliana Hanna Leite El Ottra, Cyril Epicoco, Thomas Haevermans, Florian Jabbour, Rebeca Hernandez Gutierrez, Stefan A. Little, Stefan Löfstrand, Javier A. Luna, Julien Massoni, Sophie Nadot, Charlotte Prieu, Elisabeth Reyes, Patricia Alexandra Pinheiro dos Santos, Kristel Schoonderwoerd, Anaelle Soulebeau, Yannick Städler, Georg Tschan, Amy Leung Wing Sze, Jürg Schönenberger
Abstract

Flowers are central to the biology and evolution of angiosperms (flowering plants). Here, we focus on the history of floral diversification through deep evolutionary time. A comprehensive understanding of global patterns of floral evolution has been prevented so far by the lack of an adequate morphological data set spanning all major angiosperm lineages. Using a new flexible and innovative approach, centered on a multi-user database (PROTEUS), we have built such a data set. Unlike most earlier studies of character evolution at the scale of angiosperms, we have recorded exemplar species instead of higher taxa such as genera or families. This approach allows for explicit reconstructions without assumptions about ancestral states or monophyly of supraspecific taxa, although we acknowledge that it also entails the risk of undersampling morphological variation. Importantly, the exemplar approach allows a direct match with the species sampled in molecular phylogenetic trees, providing the possibility to take branch lengths into account and to explore character evolution with probabilistic models. We report our first results from a data set of floral traits for 792 species representing all orders and 367 families (87%) of angiosperms, sampled from a recently published timetree calibrated with 136 fossil age constraints. Using this data set and tree, we reconstruct ancestral states for 26 key floral traits using parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian approaches and infer ancestral flowers for 15 key nodes (incl. Angiospermae, Mesangiospermae, Magnoliidae, Monocotyledonae, Eudicotyledonae, Pentapetalae, Rosidae, and Asteridae) as well as all extant orders of flowering plants. Further, we explore the sensitivity of our results to phylogenetic, dating, and model uncertainty. Importantly, all of our analyses converge on the same results in most cases, except near the root of the angiosperm tree, where parsimony continues to provide equivocal answers for some important floral traits, consistent with previous work. Lastly, the use of an explicit temporal framework for reconstructing ancestral states allows, for the first time, a direct comparison of inferred ancestral flowers with the known fossil record of each geological time interval. These results shed new light on long-standing questions on floral evolution across angiosperms, with important implications for a wide range of disciplines including Evo-Devo, pollination biology, and paleobotany.

Organisation(s)
Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research
External organisation(s)
University of California, Davis, Universität Zürich (UZH), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Université Paris XI - Paris-Sud, Museum national d'Histoire Naturelle, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, University of Connecticut, Universidade de Lisboa, University of Gothenburg, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, University of Cambridge, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, Instituto Oceanográfico, University of Groningen, University of Hong Kong
Publication date
2015
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
106042 Systematic botany, 106008 Botany, 106012 Evolutionary research
Keywords
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/fifteen-clues-to-the-early-diversification-of-flowers-first-results-from-the-eflower-initiative(16237b86-7834-4b25-ac2b-84b6b632e622).html