Evolution and Development of Inflorescence Architectures
- 8 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 316 (5830) , 1452-1456
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1140429
Abstract
To understand the constraints on biological diversity, we analyzed how selection and development interact to control the evolution of inflorescences, the branching structures that bear flowers. We show that a single developmental model accounts for the restricted range of inflorescence types observed in nature and that this model is supported by molecular genetic studies. The model predicts associations between inflorescence architecture, climate, and life history, which we validated empirically. Paths, or evolutionary wormholes, link different architectures in a multidimensional fitness space, but the rate of evolution along these paths is constrained by genetic and environmental factors, which explains why some evolutionary transitions are rare between closely related plant taxa.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evolutionary Paths Underlying Flower Color Variation inAntirrhinumScience, 2006
- Arabidopsis REGULATOR OF AXILLARY MERISTEMS1Controls a Leaf Axil Stem Cell Niche and Modulates Vegetative DevelopmentPlant Cell, 2006
- Phenotypic Diversity, Population Growth, and Information in Fluctuating EnvironmentsScience, 2005
- Optimizing reproduction in a randomly varying environmentPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Arabidopsis , the Rosetta Stone of Flowering Time?Science, 2002
- ‘Node counting’: an internal control of balanced vegetative and reproductive developmentPlant, Cell & Environment, 1999
- A Mutation in the Arabidopsis TFL1 Gene Affects Inflorescence Meristem Development.Plant Cell, 1991
- A Mutation in the Arabidopsis TFL1 Gene Affects Inflorescence Meristem DevelopmentPlant Cell, 1991
- Developmental Constraints and Evolution: A Perspective from the Mountain Lake Conference on Development and EvolutionThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1985
- Theoretical Morphology of the Coiled ShellScience, 1965