Abstract

Placentation refers to the mode of ovule attachment on the wall of the ovary. In multiovulate ovaries, placentation influences interactions among developing seeds with varying degrees of kinships. Placentation is a taxonomically informative character in flowering plants, yet little has been written about the origin and evolutionary trends of various placentation types in flowering plants since Puri’s and Stebbins’ work, over six decades and almost four decades ago, respectively. More recently, some authors have written about the evolution of placentation in certain groups, but an overall perspective for angiosperms is lacking. For 421 families of angiosperms, we collected data on placentation types and ovule number, and analyzed the data in the phylogenetic context using recent comprehensive phylogeny of angiosperms to test the hypotheses on the evolution of various placentation types and their association with ovule number. The distribution of placentation types across flowering plants suggests that axile placentation, followed by parietal and basal placentation, occurs more frequently than laminar and free central placentation that are very rare. Our results are more consistent with evolutionary trends proposed by Puri than by Stebbins and suggest that marginal placentation is the ancestral and most primitive placentation type, while axile is the most advanced. Placentation types show strong association with ovule number. Finally, our results on ovule number and placentation types indicate that most angiosperms may fall into two categories: one with one or few ovule(s) and basal placentation, and another with many ovules and parietal and axile placentation. Kin selection within ovaries may play a role in explaining the observed patterns. Overall, our results provide new insights into the evolution of placentation, particularly into the drivers underlying the diversification of various placentation types.

Highlights

  • Placentation refers to the mode of ovule attachment on the ovary wall

  • The frequency of different placentation types indicates that placentation types restricted to unilocular gynoecium were more abundant than placentation types restricted to multilocular gynoecium in early flowering plants

  • Despite its recognition as a taxonomically informative character in the classification of flowering plants (Lindley, 1830), we have a limited understanding of the origin and evolutionary history of placentation diversity in flowering plants (Puri, 1952; Stebbins, 1974; Ickert-Bond et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Placentation refers to the mode of ovule attachment on the ovary wall. The ovary in most flowering plants is a compound structure formed by the union of two or more carpels. The number of ovules found within the ovary, the number of carpels fusing to form the compound ovary, and the position of ovules within the ovary following the union of carpels have generated several types. Little has been written about the evolution of placentation since Puri’s (1952) classic paper nearly 65 years ago. The last comprehensive account was by Stebbins (1974), almost 40 years ago. Evolution of placentation has been studied in a few angiosperm orders such as Malpighiales (Endress et al, 2013) and Vitales (Ickert-Bond et al, 2014), but an overall perspective across angiosperms, considering evolutionary relationships of taxa, is lacking

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