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      On 'various contrivances': pollination, phylogeny and flower form in the Solanaceae.

      Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
      Animals, Bees, Evolution, Molecular, Flowers, anatomy & histology, genetics, physiology, Phylogeny, Pollination, Solanaceae

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          Abstract

          Members of the euasterid angiosperm family Solanaceae have been characterized as remarkably diverse in terms of flower morphology and pollinator type. In order to test the relative contribution of phylogeny to the pattern of distribution of floral characters related to pollination, flower form and pollinators have been mapped onto a molecular phylogeny of the family. Bilateral flower symmetry (zygomorphy) is prevalent in the basal grades of the family, and more derived clades have flowers that are largely radially symmetric, with some parallel evolution of floral bilateralism. Pollinator types ('syndromes') are extremely homoplastic in the family, but members of subfamily Solanoideae are exceptional in being largely bee pollinated. Pollinator relationships in those genera where they have been investigated more fully are not as specific as flower morphology and the classical pollinator syndrome models might suggest, and more detailed studies in some particularly variable genera, such as Iochroma and Nicotiana, are key to understanding the role of pollinators in floral evolution and adaptive radiation in the family. More studies of pollinators in the field are a priority.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          20047871
          2838263
          10.1098/rstb.2009.0236

          Chemistry
          Animals,Bees,Evolution, Molecular,Flowers,anatomy & histology,genetics,physiology,Phylogeny,Pollination,Solanaceae

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