Abstract

Agavaceae are an American family that comprises nine genera and ca. 300 species distributed in arid and semiarid environments, mainly in Mexico. The family is very successful and displays a wide array of ecological, reproductive, and morphological adaptations. Many of its members play important roles as keystone species, because they produce abundant resources during the reproductive season. In this paper we analyze the current knowledge about the pollination ecology of the different genera in the family and the role that pollination systems have played in the ecological and phylogenetic success of the group. After providing an overview of each of the genera in the family, we discuss in detail aspects of the reproductive ecology of species in the genus Agave s.l., which is composed of ca. 208 species and includes subgenera of Agave (Agave and Littaea), Manfreda, Polianthes, and Prochnyanthes. Finally, we describe the results of analyses to test the hypothesis that there has been an adaptive radiation in the genus Agave. Using chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequences we estimate the age of the Agavaceae family and the genus Agave to be 12-26 millions of years ago (MYA) and 10 MYA, respectively, and show that mean rates of diversification were higher in the genus Agave than the genus Yucca. The values we report for rates of diversification in Agave s.l. are high when compared to other radiations in plants and animals. We suggest that the desertification of North America, which started ca. 15 MY A was critical in the radiation of agaves and that the generalist pollination system of Agave has been more successful in generating new species than the extreme specialization of Yucca.

Highlights

  • Traditional classification systems placed Agave and related genera as part of Amaryllidaceae based on the shared characteristic of the inferior position of the ovaries, while Yucca and the species related to it were classified as part of Liliaceae because their ovaries are superior

  • We suggest the following scenario, based on what it is known of the adaptive radiation of Agave s.l. and about the phylogeny of Phyllostomid bats (Wetterer et a!. 2000; Simmons and Wetterer 2002)

  • We suggest that ca. 10-11 millions of years ago (MYA) (Eguiarte 1995; Good-Avila eta!. submitted, and see below), a moth-pollinated lineage of Agavaceae started to specialize to a generalist Phyllostomid bat

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Summary

Recommended Citation

Martha; Good-Ávila, Sara V.; Molina-Freaner, Fracisco; Arita, Hector T.; Castillo, Amanda; García-Mendoza, Abisaí; SilvaMontellano, Arturo; Gaut, Brandon S.; Souza, Valeria; and Eguiarte, Luis E. (2006) "Pollination Biology and Adaptive Radiation of Agavaceae, with Special Emphasis on the Genus Agave," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol 22: Iss. 1, Article 27. Martha; Good-Ávila, Sara V.; Molina-Freaner, Fracisco; Arita, Hector T.; Castillo, Amanda; García-Mendoza, Abisaí; SilvaMontellano, Arturo; Gaut, Brandon S.; Souza, Valeria; and Eguiarte, Luis E. (2006) "Pollination Biology and Adaptive Radiation of Agavaceae, with Special Emphasis on the Genus Agave," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol 22: Iss. 1, Article 27. This article is available in Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol22/iss1/ 27. POLLINATION BIOLOGY AND ADAPTIVE RADIATION OF AGAVACEAE, WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE GENUS AGAVE. ARITA, 1 AMANDA CASTILL0, 1 ABISAI GARclA-MENDOZA, ARTURO SILVA-MONTELLAN0,5 BRANDON S.

THE AGAVACEAE FAMILY
GENERAL ECOLOGY OF THE FAMILY
PHYLOGENY OF THE FAMILY
Agave Sensu Stricto
Other Genera Closely Related to Agavaceae
AND AGAVE
Systematic pollination studies in Agave started in the
ECOLOGY OF AGAVE
Geographic Changes in the Reproductive Ecology in Agave Subgenus Littaea
NECTAR FEEDING BATS IN MEXICO
ADAPTIVE RADIATION OF AGAVE SENSU LATO
COMPARISON TO OTHER KNOWN ADAPTIVE RADIATIONS
Findings
LITERATURE CITED
Full Text
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