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(American Journal of Botany. 2003;90:49-71.)
© 2003 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Structure and Development

Ontogenetic origins of floral bilateral symmetry in Moringaceae (Brassicales)1

Mark E. Olson2

Instituto de Biología, U.N.A.M., Departamento de Botánica, Circuito exterior s/n, Ciudad Universitaria, Copilco, Coyoacán, A.P. 70-367 México, D.F., C.P. 04510, Mexico

Floral morphology of the 13 species of Moringa ranges from actinomorphic flowers with little hypanthium to highly zygomorphic flowers with well-developed hypanthia. Scanning electron and light microscopy were used to identify ontogenetic differences among two actinomorphic and eight zygomorphic species. All species show traces of zygomorphy between petal organogenesis and anther differentiation. At late organogenesis, zygomorphy is manifest by one petal being larger than the others, slight unidirectional maturation of the anthers, and in many species, some staminodes may be missing. At organ differentiation and beyond, the actinomorphic species show a trend toward increasing actinomorphy, whereas the zygomorphic features of early ontogeny are progressively accentuated throughout the ontogeny of the zygomorphic species. Because of the early traces of zygomorphy throughout the family, ontogeny in Moringa does not resemble that known from the sister taxon Caricaceae, which has flowers that are actinomorphic throughout ontogeny. Great intraspecific variation was found in floral plan in the actinomorphic-flowered species in contrast to the zygomorphic species. Each of the main clades in the family is distinguished by at least one feature of floral ontogeny. In general, ontogenetic differences that are congruent with deeper phylogenetic splits tend to occur earlier in ontogeny than those congruent with more recent divergences.

Key Words: Brassicales • development • evolution • floral symmetry • homology • Moringa • ontogeny • phylogeny







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