Abstract
The carpel is a fascinating structure that plays a critical role in flowering plant reproduction and contributed greatly to the evolutionary success and diversification of flowering plants. The remarkable feature of the carpel is that it is a closed structure that envelopes the ovules and after fertilization develops into the fruit which protects, helps disperse, and supports seed development into a new plant. Nearly all plant-based foods are either derived from a flowering plant or are a direct product of the carpel. Given its importance it’s no surprise that plant and evolutionary biologists have been trying to explain the origin of the carpel for a long time. Before carpel evolution seeds were produced on open leaf-like structures that are exposed to the environment. When the carpel evolved in the stem lineage of flowering plants, seeds became protected within its closed structure. The evolutionary transition from that open precursor to the closed carpel remains one of the greatest mysteries of plant evolution. In recent years, we have begun to complete a picture of what the first carpels might have looked like. On the other hand, there are still many gaps in our understanding of what the precursor of the carpel looked like and what changes to its developmental mechanisms allowed for this evolutionary transition. This review aims to present an overview of existing theories of carpel evolution with a particular emphasis on those that account for the structures that preceded the carpel and/or present testable developmental hypotheses. In the second part insights from the development and evolution of diverse plant organs are gathered to build a developmental hypothesis for the evolutionary transition from a hypothesized laminar open structure to the closed structure of the carpel.
Highlights
The carpel is a complex closed structure that produces the ovules and facilitates fertilization of the egg cells within, via three specialized structures
As the ovule develops into the seed, the carpel tissues develop into the fruit layers which protect and help disperse the seed
The presence of the carpel is the unifying trait of all flowering plants and gives meaning to the name of the flowering plants group, the angiosperms, which is to say encased or enclosed seed
Summary
The carpel is a complex closed structure that produces the ovules and facilitates fertilization of the egg cells within, via three specialized structures. Another issue with placing Corystosperms as precursors to the flowering plants is that ovules are produced abaxially on these structures which is inconsistent with the adaxial position of ovules on the hypothesized ancestral carpel [15].
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