Abstract

Stabilization and variation of floral structures are indispensable for plant reproduction and evolution; however, the developmental mechanism regulating their structural robustness is largely unknown. To investigate this mechanism, we examined positional arrangement (aestivation) of excessively produced perianth organs (tepals) of six- and seven-tepaled (lobed) flowers in six Anemone species (Ranunculaceae). We found that the tepal arrangement that occurred in nature varied intraspecifically between spiral and whorled arrangements. Moreover, among the studied species, variation was commonly limited to three types, including whorls, despite five geometrically possible arrangements in six-tepaled flowers and two types among six possibilities in seven-tepaled flowers. A spiral arrangement, on the other hand, was unique to five-tepaled flowers. A spiral phyllotaxis model with stochasticity on initiating excessive primordia accounted for these limited variations in arrangement in cases when the divergence angle between preexisting primordia was less than 144°. Moreover, interspecific differences in the frequency of the observed arrangements were explained by the change of model parameters that represent meristematic growth and differential organ growth. These findings suggest that the phyllotaxis parameters are responsible for not only intraspecific stability but interspecific difference of floral structure. Decreasing arrangements from six-tepaled to seven-tepaled Anemone flowers demonstrate that the stabilization occurs as development proceeds to increase the component (organ) number, in contrast from the intuition that the variation will be larger due to increasing number of possible states (arrangements).

Highlights

  • IntroductionDiversification of number of floral parts (sepals and petals) is one of the major problems of floral evolution (Ronse De Craene 2016)

  • Diversification of number of floral parts is one of the major problems of floral evolution (Ronse De Craene 2016)

  • The condition VT = 0 corresponds to the situation described in the previous study (Kitazawa and Fujimoto 2016b), while for simplicity, the present model does not incorporate the angular displacement of primordia, which was introduced after primordia initiation in an earlier study (Kitazawa and Fujimoto 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Diversification of number of floral parts (sepals and petals) is one of the major problems of floral evolution (Ronse De Craene 2016). The arrangement of floral parts plays a central role in the precise determination of the number of floral parts. The two major types of floral organ arrangement are spiral and whorled arrangements. Spiral initiation is often found in various clades in angiosperms (Endress and Doyle 2007). The aestivation, the overlapping arrangement of petals or sepals is quincuncial

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