Data from: Pollinator shifts, contingent evolution, and evolutionary constraint drive floral disparity in Salvia (Lamiaceae): evidence from morphometrics and phylogenetic comparative methods
Switches in pollinators have been argued to be key drivers of floral evolution in angiosperms. However, few studies have tested the relationship between floral shape evolution and switches in pollination in large clades. In concert with a dated phylogeny, we present a morphometric analysis of coroll...
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Zusammenfassung: | Switches in pollinators have been argued to be key drivers of floral
evolution in angiosperms. However, few studies have tested the
relationship between floral shape evolution and switches in pollination in
large clades. In concert with a dated phylogeny, we present a morphometric
analysis of corolla, anther connective, and style shape across 44% of
nearly 1,000 species of Salvia (Lamiaceae) and test four hypotheses of
floral evolution. We demonstrate that floral morphospace of New World (NW)
Salvia is largely distinct from that of Old World (OW) Salvia and that
these differences are pollinator driven; that shifts in floral morphology
sometimes mirror shifts in pollinators; that anther connectives (key
constituents of the Salvia staminal lever) and styles co-evolved from
curved to linear shapes following shifts from bee to bird pollination; and
that morphological differences between NW and OW bee flowers are partly
the legacy of constraints imposed by an earlier shift to bird pollination
in the NW. The distinctive staminal lever in Salvia is a morphologically
diverse structure that has evolved in concert with both the corolla and
style, under different pollinator pressures, and in contingent fashion. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.q573n5tg5 |