In Lithospermum (Boraginaceae), floral diversity is quite large, with variation in individual quantitative and qualitative traits as well as suites of floral characteristics. The present study utilizes phylogenetic, morphometric and developmental methodologies to investigate patterns of floral evolution, of individual and suites of traits, in the genus and among related genera. The evolutionary patterns of eight quantitative and five qualitative traits were reconstructed, and morphometrics and the evolution of floral morphospace were examined in the genus. Floral developmental patterns were established with light and scanning electron microscopy. Phylogenetic analyses provided evidence that derived flower types have each evolved multiple times, with differences in the manner in which these flower types arose. Floral morphospace has increased throughout the evolution of Lithospermum. Floral developmental patterns and cell lengths of floral organs at anthesis provided evidence that, in Lithospermum, an increase in the length of the sexual organs of flowers involves both longer cells and a greater number of mitotic divisions, but an increase in the length of the corolla is primarily a result of a larger number of cell divisions.
CITATION STYLE
Cohen, J. I. (2016). Floral evolution in Lithospermum (Boraginaceae): Independent origins of similar flower types. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 180(2), 213–228. https://doi.org/10.1111/boj.12368
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