EVOLUTION OF LEAF FORM IN MARSILEACEOUS FERNS: EVIDENCE FOR HETEROCHRONY |
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Authors: | Kathleen M. Pryer David J. Hearn |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708;E-mail:;Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721;E-mail: |
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Abstract: | Using an explicit phylogenetic framework, ontogenetic patterns of leaf form are compared among the three genera of marsileaceous ferns ( Marsilea , Regnellidium , and Pilularia ) with the outgroup Asplenium to address the hypothesis that heterochrony played a role in their evolution. We performed a Fourier analysis on a developmental sequence of leaves from individuals of these genera. Principal components analysis of the harmonic coefficients was used to characterize the ontogenetic trajectories of leaf form in a smaller dimensional space. Results of this study suggest that the "evolutionary juvenilization" observed in these leaf sequences is best described using a mixed model of heterochrony (accelerated growth rate and early termination at a simplified leaf form). The later stages of the ancestral, more complex, ontogenetic pattern were lost in Marsileaceae, giving rise to the simplified adult leaves of Marsilea , Regnellidium , and Pilularia . Life-history traits such as ephemeral and uncertain habitats, high reproductive rates, and accelerated maturation, which are typical for marsileaceous ferns, suggest that they may be " r strategists." The evidence for heterochrony presented here illustrates that it has resulted in profound ecological and morphological consequences for the entire life history of Marsileaceae. |
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Keywords: | Elliptic Fourier analysis heteroblasty heterochrony leaf shape principal components analysis |
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