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Evolvability and constraint in the evolution of three-dimensional flower morphology

Opedal, Øystein H. LU ; Hildesheim, Laura S. LU orcid and Armbruster, W. Scott (2022) In American Journal of Botany 109(11). p.1906-1917
Abstract

Premise: Flower phenotypes evolve to attract pollinators and to ensure efficient pollen transfer to and from the bodies of pollinators or, in self-compatible bisexual flowers, between anthers and stigmas. If functionally interacting traits are genetically correlated, response to selection may be subject to genetic constraints. Genetic constraints can be assessed by quantifying standing genetic variation in (multivariate) phenotypic traits and by asking how much the available variation is reduced under specific assumptions about phenotypic selection on functionally interacting and genetically correlated traits. Methods: We evaluated multivariate evolvability and potential genetic constraints underlying the evolution of the... (More)

Premise: Flower phenotypes evolve to attract pollinators and to ensure efficient pollen transfer to and from the bodies of pollinators or, in self-compatible bisexual flowers, between anthers and stigmas. If functionally interacting traits are genetically correlated, response to selection may be subject to genetic constraints. Genetic constraints can be assessed by quantifying standing genetic variation in (multivariate) phenotypic traits and by asking how much the available variation is reduced under specific assumptions about phenotypic selection on functionally interacting and genetically correlated traits. Methods: We evaluated multivariate evolvability and potential genetic constraints underlying the evolution of the three-dimensional structure of Dalechampia blossoms. First, we used data from a greenhouse crossing design to estimate the G matrix for traits representing the relative positions of male and female sexual organs (anthers and stigmas) and used the G matrix to ask how genetic variation is distributed in multivariate space. To assess the evolutionary importance of genetic constraints, we related standing genetic variation across phenotypic space to evolutionary divergence of population and species in the same phenotypic directions. Results: Evolvabilities varied substantially across phenotype space, suggesting that certain traits or trait combinations may be subject to strong genetic constraint. Traits involved functionally in flower-pollinator fit and autonomous selfing exhibited considerable independent evolutionary potential, but population and species divergence tended to occur in phenotypic directions associated with greater-than-average evolvability. Conclusions: These results are consistent with the hypothesis that genetic constraints can hamper joint trait evolution towards optimum flower-pollinator fit and optimum self-pollination rates.

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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
conditional evolvability, Dalechampia, Euphorbiaceae, functional constraints, genetic constraints, plant–pollinator interactions
in
American Journal of Botany
volume
109
issue
11
pages
1906 - 1917
publisher
Botanical Society of America
external identifiers
  • pmid:36371715
  • scopus:85142034926
ISSN
0002-9122
DOI
10.1002/ajb2.16092
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. American Journal of Botany published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Botanical Society of America.
id
601ee6ca-41f9-4278-a861-294e8d50aacf
date added to LUP
2022-11-27 09:38:00
date last changed
2024-04-18 15:35:23
@article{601ee6ca-41f9-4278-a861-294e8d50aacf,
  abstract     = {{<p>Premise: Flower phenotypes evolve to attract pollinators and to ensure efficient pollen transfer to and from the bodies of pollinators or, in self-compatible bisexual flowers, between anthers and stigmas. If functionally interacting traits are genetically correlated, response to selection may be subject to genetic constraints. Genetic constraints can be assessed by quantifying standing genetic variation in (multivariate) phenotypic traits and by asking how much the available variation is reduced under specific assumptions about phenotypic selection on functionally interacting and genetically correlated traits. Methods: We evaluated multivariate evolvability and potential genetic constraints underlying the evolution of the three-dimensional structure of Dalechampia blossoms. First, we used data from a greenhouse crossing design to estimate the G matrix for traits representing the relative positions of male and female sexual organs (anthers and stigmas) and used the G matrix to ask how genetic variation is distributed in multivariate space. To assess the evolutionary importance of genetic constraints, we related standing genetic variation across phenotypic space to evolutionary divergence of population and species in the same phenotypic directions. Results: Evolvabilities varied substantially across phenotype space, suggesting that certain traits or trait combinations may be subject to strong genetic constraint. Traits involved functionally in flower-pollinator fit and autonomous selfing exhibited considerable independent evolutionary potential, but population and species divergence tended to occur in phenotypic directions associated with greater-than-average evolvability. Conclusions: These results are consistent with the hypothesis that genetic constraints can hamper joint trait evolution towards optimum flower-pollinator fit and optimum self-pollination rates.</p>}},
  author       = {{Opedal, Øystein H. and Hildesheim, Laura S. and Armbruster, W. Scott}},
  issn         = {{0002-9122}},
  keywords     = {{conditional evolvability; Dalechampia; Euphorbiaceae; functional constraints; genetic constraints; plant–pollinator interactions}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{11}},
  pages        = {{1906--1917}},
  publisher    = {{Botanical Society of America}},
  series       = {{American Journal of Botany}},
  title        = {{Evolvability and constraint in the evolution of three-dimensional flower morphology}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.16092}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/ajb2.16092}},
  volume       = {{109}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}