HARDLY A RELICT: FREEZING AND THE EVOLUTION OF VESSELLESS WOOD IN WINTERACEAE
Open Access
- 1 March 2002
- Vol. 56 (3) , 464-478
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01359.x
Abstract
The Winteraceae are traditionally regarded as the least-specialized descendents of the first flowering plants,\ud based largely on their lack of xylem vessels. Since vessels have been viewed as a key innovation for angiosperm\ud diversification, Winteraceae have been portrayed as declining relicts, limited to wet forest habitats where their tracheidbased\ud wood does not impose a significant hydraulic constraints. In contrast, phylogenetic analyses place Winteraceae\ud among angiosperm clades with vessels, indicating that their vesselless wood is derived rather than primitive, whereas\ud extension of the Winteraceae fossil record into the Early Cretaceous suggests a more complex ecological history than\ud has been deduced from their current distribution. However, the selective regime and ecological events underlying the\ud possible loss of vessels in Winteraceae have remained enigmatic. Here we examine the hypothesis that vessels were\ud lost as an adaptation to freezing-prone environments in Winteraceae by measuring the responses of xylem water\ud transport to freezing for a diverse group of Winteraceae taxa as compared to Canella winterana (Canellaceae, a close\ud relative with vessels) and sympatric conifer taxa. We found that mean percent loss of xylem water transport capacity\ud following freeze-thaw varied from 0% to 6% for Winteraceae species from freezing-prone temperate climates and\ud approximately 20% in those taxa from tropical (nonfreezing) climates. Similarly, conifers exhibit almost no decrease\ud in xylem hydraulic conductivity following freezing. In contrast, water transport in Canella stems is nearly 85% blocked\ud after freeze-thaw. Although vessel-bearing wood of Canella possesses considerably greaterhydraulic capacity than\ud Winteraceae, nearly 20% of xylem hydraulic conductance remains, a value that is comparable to the hydraulic capacity\ud of vesselless Winteraceae xylem, if the proportion of hydraulic flow through vessels (modeled as ideal capillaries) is\ud removed. Thus, the evolutionary removal of vessels may not necessarily require a deleterious shift to an ineffective\ud vascular system. By integrating Winteraceae’s phylogenetic relationships and fossil history with physiological and\ud ecological observations, we suggest that, as ancestors of modern Winteraceae passed through temperate conditions\ud present in Southern Gondwana during the Early Cretaceous, they were exposed to selective pressures against vesselpossession\ud and returned to a vascular system relying on tracheids. These results suggest that the vesselless condition\ud is advantageous in freezing-prone areas, which is supported by the strong bias in the ecological abundance of Winteraceae\ud to wet temperate and tropical alpine habitats, rather than a retained feature from the first vesselless angiosperms.\ud We believe that vesselless wood plays an important role in the ecological abundance of Winteraceae in Southern\ud Hemisphere temperate environments by enabling the retention of leaves and photosynthesis in the face of frequent\ud freeze-thaw eventsKeywords
This publication has 106 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stem water transport and freeze-thaw xylem embolism in conifers and angiosperms in a Tasmanian treeline heathOecologia, 2001
- Morphological Phylogenetic Analysis of Basal Angiosperms: Comparison and Combination with Molecular DataInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2000
- Xylem sap flow and stem hydraulics of the vesselless angiosperm Drimys granadensis (Winteraceae) in a Costa Rican elfin forestPlant, Cell & Environment, 2000
- Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetic Implications of Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequences of Ribosomal DNA in WinteraceaeAmerican Journal of Botany, 1993
- Phylogenies and the Analysis of Evolutionary Sequences, with Examples From Seed PlantsEvolution, 1989
- Winteraceae pollen from the miocene of the southwestern cape (south africa)Grana, 1988
- The Ecology of Leaf Life SpansAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1982
- Natural hybridism inPseudowintera(Winteraceae)New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1980
- Variation on the population, racial, and species level in the primitive relic Angiosperm genusDrimys (Winteraceae) in South AmericaÖsterreichische botanische Zeitschrift, 1979
- An explanation for alpine timberlineNew Zealand Journal of Botany, 1971