Am. J. Bot. Li-Cor Advertisement
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


     


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Supplementary Data
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in ISI Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via ISI Web of Science (1)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.
Agricola
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.
(American Journal of Botany. 2005;92:1068-1076.)
© 2005 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Structure and Development

The evolution of unisexual flowers: morphological and functional convergence results from diverse developmental transitions1

Caroline H. Mitchell and Pamela K. Diggle2

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309 USA

Received for publication September 17, 2004. Accepted for publication April 8, 2005.

ABSTRACT

Unisexual flower morphology was examined within a phylogenetic context in order to identify developmental transitions associated with the multiple origins of dioecy in flowering plants. Historically, two categories of unisexual flowers have been recognized: type I flowers exhibit rudiments of the nonfunctional organ type, while type II flowers bear no vestigial sexual organs. Mapping of these flower types onto a composite phylogeny shows that type II morphology is homoplasious and has resulted from at least four distinct evolutionary developmental pathways. The historical assignment of unisexual flowers into only two morphological types has masked important developmental and evolutionary dynamics.

Key Words: character evolution • dioecy • flower development • heterochrony • homeosis • homoplasy • unisexual flowers

Among angiosperms, dioecy (separate male and female plants) is thought to have evolved more than 100 times to account for the 160 plant families that include dioecious species (Charlesworth and Guttman, 1999 ). This number is likely an underestimate because dioecy may have multiple independent evolutionary origins within some families (e.g., Arecaceae, Rosaceae, Euphorbiaceae). Therefore, dioecy may be considered a preeminent example of homoplasy.

Homoplasy is the repeated evolution of the "same" character state in separate groups of organisms and results from convergence, parallelism, or evolutionary reversals (Hufford, 1996 ). Homoplasy has received considerable attention from phylogeneticists (e.g., Sanderson and Donoghue, 1989 ; Philippe et al., 1996 ; Ree and Donoghue, 1998 ; Wiens et al., 2003 ). Because homoplasy is difficult to identify, it is often viewed as noise that complicates analyses of phylogenetic relationships (Brooks, 1996 ). Recently homoplasy has become a subject of interest in its own right (e.g., Sanderson and Hufford, 1996 ) and is viewed as a critical source of information about a variety of evolutionary phenomena, including adaptation (Larson and Losos, 1996 ; Barrett et al., 1997 ).

The role of natural selection in the homoplastic origins of dioecy has been a focus of intensive research. Hypotheses for the origin of dioecy from hermaphroditism consider many genetic and ecological factors. These include avoidance of inbreeding (Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1978b ; Thomson and Barrett, 1981 ), sexual selection (Freeman et al., 1980 ), and optimal resource allocation (Bawa, 1980 ; Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1981 ; Thomson and Brunet, 1990 ; Brunet and Charlesworth, 1995 ; Seger and Eckhart, 1996 ). Empirical and theoretical studies also have identified possible evolutionary pathways to dioecy under these selective forces (reviewed in Barrett, 2002 ). Transitions to dioecy from distyly (e.g., Darwin, 1877 ; Barrett and Shore, 1987 ; Barrett, 1990 ), from monoecy (e.g., Lloyd, 1980 ; Renner and Ricklefs, 1995 ; Renner and Won, 2001 ; Dorken and Barrett, 2004 ), and from gynodioecy (e.g., Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1978a ; Ashman, 1999 ; Charlesworth, 1999 ; Delph, 2003 ) have been explored. Despite multiple evolutionary forces and diverse intermediates, these evolutionary transitions all have the same end result—functionally unisexual individuals.

In contrast to the depth and sophistication of analyses of the advantages of dioecy and the multiple evolutionary pathways that result in dioecy, knowledge of the actual morphology and underlying developmental modifications associated with these transitions is surprisingly sparse. The ontogeny of hermaphroditic flowers has been modified repeatedly to result in developmental programs that yield either staminate or carpellate flowers. Yet, the changes that underlie the transition from bisexual to unisexual flower production have not been thoroughly investigated. Are there multiple developmental routes to unisexuality associated with the apparent functional convergence?

Since Darwin (1877) , two morphological types of unisexual flowers have been recognized (Fig. 1). One type exhibits "plain rudiments of male organs" in carpellate flowers and in staminate flowers "rudiments of the female organs," (p. 278) while the other type exhibits no rudiments of the opposite sex. The recognition of these two categories of unisexual flower morphology has persisted in the literature on unisexual flowers (e.g., Heslop-Harrison, 1957 , 1958 ; Dellaporta and Calderon-Urrea, 1993 ; Lebel-Hardenack and Grant, 1997 ; Ainsworth 2000 ), as has the notion that these distinct morphological types also differ in patterns of early development. The first type of flower, hereafter referred to as type I, is unisexual by abortion. Initiation of androecial and gynoecial organs occurs in all flowers, followed by the termination of development in one or the other organ set. The second type of flower, hereafter referred to as type II, is unisexual from inception. The floral meristem initiates only androecial or gynoecial organs and does not go through a hermaphroditic stage.



View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1. Idealized diagrams representing the reproductive organs and receptacles of the two types of unisexual flowers. The staminate type I flower is shown with a nonfunctional, vestigial gynoecium in the center. The carpellate type I flower is shown with four nonfunctional, vestigial stamens. Type II flowers have only a single category of reproductive organ. Black = functional carpels; white = functional stamens; hatched = vestigial organs

 
Although development of the two types of unisexual flowers appears to be distinct, the evolutionary origins of these developmental patterns is not necessarily so. The two morphological types conceivably may result from any of four possible categories of developmental transitions (Fig. 2). There are two modes of direct developmental modification from hermaphroditic flowers: (1) sterilization of androecium or gynoecium post-initiation, possibly followed by evolutionary reduction of those organs but not leading to complete loss of the organ (type I at maturity), and (2) complete loss of the organ type/ whorl coincident with an origin of unisexuality (type II at maturity). In addition, (3) type II flowers might also arise from a type I intermediate via changes in the timing of organ abortion. And (4) transitions from type II flowers to type I flowers might also be possible. Analysis of the actual developmental changes that have occurred during the evolution of unisexual flowers requires investigation of both the flower morphology and phylogenetic position of taxa with type I and type II flowers.



View larger version (18K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2. Four potential modes of developmental modification underlying the evolutionary transition from hermaphroditic to unisexual flowers: (1) sterilization of androecium or gynoecium postinitiation, (type I at maturity); (2) complete loss of organ type/whorl coincident with an origin of dioecy (type II at maturity); (3) initial origin of a type I intermediate with subsequent loss of organ initiation (type II at maturity); and (4) although seemingly unlikely, an initial loss of organ initiation with subsequent gain of rudimentary organs (type II at maturity) is also possible. Black = functional carpels; white = functional stamens; hatched = vestigial organs

 
In the past decade, there has been an explosion of information about evolutionary relationships among flowering plants (e.g., Hoot et al., 1999 ; Mathews and Donoghue, 1999 ; Parkinson et al., 1999 ; Qiu et al., 1999 , 2000 ; Soltis et al., 1999 ; Graham and Olmstead, 2000 ; Graham et al., 2000 ; Soltis et al., 2000 ; Zanis et al., 2002 ). Phylogenies are used in combination with morphological data to address the following questions: (1) What is the overall distribution and frequency of the two unisexual flower types among dioecious taxa? (2) How many evolutionary transitions to type I (unisexual by abortion) and type II (unisexual from inception) flowers have occurred? (3) What do these transitions imply for the developmental evolution of unisexuality?

MATERIALS AND METHODS

In order to address the distribution and frequency of unisexual flower types, it is necessary to compile a data set of the type of unisexual flowers characteristic of dioecious taxa. Because our ultimate interest is the homoplastic origins of dioecy, we did not include the unisexual flowers of monoecious taxa in this data set. Renner and Ricklefs (1995) estimated that of the 240000 species of flowering plants, 14 620 are dioecious. A list of the dioecious genera used in their study was the starting point in assembling a list of dioecious taxa for this study. Several other comprehensive reviews (Yampolsky and Yampolsky, 1922 ; Lindsay, 1930 ; Delph et al., 1996 ; Heilbuth, 2000 ) provided additional occurrences. Descriptions of mature flower morphology were obtained from various sources including floras (e.g., Radford et al., 1968 ; Harden, 2000 ), developmental morphology texts (e.g., Payer, 1857 ; Sattler, 1973 ), and the primary literature. References to the primary literature were obtained by searching databases such as ISI Web of Science (website http://www.isiknowledge.com) and archives of several botanical journals available through JSTOR (2002). Informative descriptions of floral morphology and development could not be found in the literature for all dioecious species; however, the resulting data set includes 477 of the 994 genera that contain dioecious species and spans 36 of the 37 angiosperm orders in which dioecy occurs (Renner and Ricklefs, 1995 , website http://www.umsl.edu/~biosrenn/dioecy.pdf) and is therefore likely to be a representative sample.

From the data on mature morphology, each taxon was assigned to one of the two basic types of unisexual flowers based on the presence or absence of rudiments of the gynoecium or androecium (type I = rudiments present; type II = rudiments absent). For each species, staminate and carpellate flower types were considered separately. The overall frequency of the two unisexual flower types was tabulated by hand from these data.

Using MacClade (Maddison and Maddison, 2001 ), unisexual flower types were mapped onto a composite angiosperm phylogeny (Table 1, Fig. 3; see Weiblen et al., 2000 , for a discussion of the use of composite phylogenies). This large composite phylogeny was assembled by integrating 29 published phylogenies using the framework of Soltis et al. (2000) . The phylogenies were mixed in hierarchy between family and genus level in order to best fit the taxonomic unit used by the systematists and the data collected in this study. Due to this mixture, the general term "taxon" is used to describe the taxonomic unit at branch tips. To investigate transitions between flower types, all taxa were scored for a character with the following four states: (0) no dioecy present in taxon, (1) type I flowers present in taxon, (2) type II flowers present in taxon, (3) both type I and II flowers present in taxon. Dioecious taxa with unknown flower types were scored 1/2 to indicate that the presence or absence of rudiments was not mentioned in the literature (a Microsoft Excel file containing coding and source for each taxon is available in the Supplemental Data accompanying the online version of this article). Staminate flower data and carpellate flower data were analyzed separately. The frequencies of character changes under ACCTRAN (accelerated transitions) optimization for resolving options were calculated for each tree. The ACCTRAN optimization yielded a more conservative estimate of independent origins than the DELTRAN (delayed transitions) optimization.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 1. Phylogenies used to assemble large angiosperm tree repre sented in Fig. 3

 


View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3. Summary of the relationship between individual trees in the assembled angiosperm tree. Numbers refer to individual trees in Table 1

 
Following character mapping in MacClade, the data were analyzed in two ways. First, the phylogenies were used to determine the number of independent evolutionary origins of type I and type II unisexual flowers. Second, the phylogenetic patterns were used to identify the four possible transitions among flower types (Fig. 2). Our scoring assigned clades as either dioecious or nondioecious; however, transitions 1 and 2 (Fig. 2) assume that the nondioecious clades are hermaphroditic and bear bisexual flowers. Therefore, for each occurrence of transitions 1 and 2, we reexamined the data to confirm that the ancestral condition at the point of transition was, indeed, hermaphroditic.

RESULTS

Frequency of unisexual flower types
Morphological data on mature flowers were obtained for 482 genera (678 species) from 124 families (Appendix, see Supplemental Data accompanying online version of this article; taxonomy based on GRIN taxonomy [Germplasm Resources Information Network {Wiersema and León, 1999 }]). Table 2 summarizes the frequency of type I and type II morphology for both staminate and carpellate flowers. Useful information for staminate flowers was more common in the literature and led in part to differing totals for staminate and carpellate flowers. Type I flowers (unisexual by abortion) are more frequent overall among dioecious species examined (Table 2). For species in which the morphology of both flower sexes was documented, staminate and carpellate flowers were typically of the same type (both type I or both type II). However, flower type differed between staminate and carpellate flowers in 57 cases (9% of species examined). For a small number of species, a single source indicated that the species produced flowers of the same gender with clear rudiments and also flowers that lacked rudiments. These are recorded as "type I and II." Species recorded as "type I or II" had conflicting reports for flowers of the same gender in the literature.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 2. Frequency of unisexual flower types among dioecious spe cies

 
Origins of unisexual flower types
Mapping of flower type onto the composite phylogeny reconstructed 106 and 108 transitions among flower types for the carpellate and staminate flower data sets, respectively. Of these, 68 and 74, respectively, could be characterized unambiguously (analysis not shown; however, examples are provided in Figs. 46). For the carpellate flower data set, there were 48 transitions from hermaphroditic flowers to type I flowers (unisexual by abortion), 18 transitions from hermaphroditic to type II flowers (unisexual from inception), and two transitions from type I to type II flowers. For the staminate flower data set, there were 44 transitions from hermaphroditic flowers to type I flowers, 26 transitions from hermaphroditic to type II flowers, and four transitions from type I to type II flowers. The two taxa that showed a transition from type I to type II in the carpellate flower data set were among the four taxa that showed this transition in the staminate flower data set. There were no transitions from type II to type I flowers in either data set. The number of transitions between type I and type II is likely an underestimate. There are 63 genera and 36 families that include species with type I and species with type II flowers (Appendix); however no phylogenies were available for these taxa that had the resolution necessary to determine the direction of transition among the two unisexual flower types.



View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 4. Unisexual flower type mapped onto a phylogeny of Asparagales (adapted from Soltis et al., 2000 , fig. 3 ). Asparagus, Behnia, and Ruscus with type I flowers are nested within a clade otherwise characterized by hermaphroditic flowers (pathway 1)

 


View larger version (40K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 6. Unisexual flower type mapped onto a phylogeny of Restionaceae (adapted from Eldenas and Linder, 2000 ). Ischyrolepis with type II flowers is nested among genera with type I flowers (pathway 3)

 
DISCUSSION

Extensive research on the sexual diversification of flowering plants has shown that dioecy is homoplastic at multiple levels. Dioecy has evolved numerous times; it may arise under a diverse set of selective forces and also via several distinct evolutionary pathways (e.g., Charlesworth and Charlesworth, 1978b ; Bawa, 1980 ; Freeman et al., 1980 ; Thomson and Barrett, 1981 ; Brunet and Charlesworth, 1995 ; Barrett, 2002 ; Delph, 2003 ). We show that the evolution of dioecy also ultimately involves morphological convergence resulting from multiple types of developmental transitions to unisexual flowers.

Developmental evolution
The distribution of flower types among angiosperm lineages suggests that evolutionary transitions from hermaphroditic to unisexual flowers have occurred via three of the four possible pathways of developmental modification (see Fig. 2): (1) hermaphroditic flowers to type I flowers (unisexual by abortion; e.g., Fig. 4), (2) hermaphroditic flowers to type II flowers (unisexual from inception; e.g., Fig. 5), and (3) hermaphroditic flowers to type I unisexual flowers to type II unisexual flowers (e.g., Fig. 6). The morphological category "type II flowers" (unisexual from inception) results from two of these patterns of developmental evolution. Further consideration of taxa with type II flowers, however, suggests that at least four possible homoplastic origins of type II morphology can be recognized (summarized in Fig. 7). For convenience of discussion, these four types of origins are referred to as "indirect" (essentially pathway 3 in Fig. 2), and three types of "direct" (encompassed by pathway 2 in Fig. 2): direct–early mutation, direct–homeosis, and direct–extinction.



View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 5. Unisexual flower type mapped onto a phylogeny of Austrobaileyales (adapted from Qiu et al., 2000 ). Schisandra and Kadsura with type II flowers are nested with a clade characterized by hermaphroditic flowers (pathway 2)

 


View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 7. Developmental transitions leading from an hermaphroditic flower to a unisexual flower. Black = functional carpels; white = functional stamens; hatched = vestigial organs

 
Evidence for an indirect type II origin consists of type II taxa nested within lineages otherwise characterized by type I flowers (e.g., Fig. 6). The type II unisexual flowers (unisexual from inception) of these taxa therefore are likely derived from type I flowers (unisexual by abortion). Such an evolutionary transition might occur by a process of heterochrony (Fig. 7). According to this scenario, the original transition to unisexual flower development from a bisexual condition occurs through loss of function via abortion of the androecium or gynoecium resulting in a type I flower. Following the origin of unisexual flowers, selection for reallocation of resources consumed by the development of nonfunctional organs could lead to termination of development at progressively earlier stages. Ultimately such changes in the timing of abortion could result in complete absence of initiation, i.e., a type II flower. This process of developmental evolution is consistent with models of heterochrony in which a specific developmental event, abortion of organs, occurs earlier and earlier in flower development (e.g., Li and Johnston, 2000 ). Hufford (1997) suggests that heterochrony may underlie numerous other occurrences of floral homoplasy as well.

Indirect origins of type II flowers were relatively rare in the data set; however, numerous genera and families contained species with type I flowers and species with type II flowers (see Appendix). Our ability to identify transitions between these flower types was hampered by the lack of species-level phylogenetic analyses for these groups. Further testing of hypotheses for indirect origins of type II unisexual flowers, and of heterochrony, requires more detailed (preferably species-level) phylogenies of those clades with mixed unisexual flower types and thorough developmental analyses of key species within those clades.

In addition to indirect origins via type I intermediates, taxa with type II flowers (unisexual from inception) also have been derived within hermaphroditic lineages (e.g., Fig. 5). Three alternative scenarios for the direct developmental evolution of type II flowers from hermaphroditic flowers can be proposed. The first two include the instantaneous loss of reproductive organs coincident with the origin of unisexuality either by homeosis (the transformation of one organ type into a different organ type [Baum and Donoghue, 2002 ]; direct–homeosis) or through absence of initiation (direct–early mutation). A homeotic origin of unisexuality would result from the conversion of stamens into carpels and vice versa (Fig. 7). Evidence for the origin of unisexuality via homeosis requires an accounting of the number and position of all reproductive organs in the ancestral hermaphroditic state and in the derived unisexual state. For example, if carpellate flowers arose by homeosis, the ancestral bisexual flowers may have five stamens and five carpels, whereas carpellate flowers of the dioecious species would have no stamens and 10 carpels. The "carpellization of stamens" has been described for Carica papaya (Storey, 1969 ). The putative bisexual ancestral state includes five or 10 stamens (in one or two whorls, respectively) and five carpels. In dioecious C. papaya, carpellate flowers have 10 carpels in two whorls and lack any additional whorl of staminode structures. The author concluded that the stamens in the carpellate flower "have become transmuted into sterile carpels comprising part of the pistillate flower pistil and have lost their identity as stamens" (p. 494). In Arabidopsis thaliana, loci that may play a role in homeotic transformations have been identified. For example, the SUPERMAN gene has a role in establishing the boundary between stamens and carpels. In superman mutants "stamen primordia proliferate inwards at the expense of carpel primordia" (Smyth, 2001 , p. R84). The converse also has been found in other mutants of the B function genes (i.e., the ABC model of flower development, Coen and Meyerowitz, 1991 ; see Ainsworth, 2000 , for discussion of MADS-box genes in dioecious plants). These mutants are effectively female with homeotic transformations of stamens to carpels (Schwarz-Sommer et al., 1990 ).

Type II flowers may also arise directly from hermaphroditic flowers via mutations in the process involved in organ initiation (direct–early mutation; Fig. 7). In contrast to a homeotic origin, the identity of the organs is not altered; rather, they are entirely absent. In this case, the number of functional organs in the androecium and gynoecium of unisexual flowers would not be increased relative to the ancestral state. The genus Lomandra (Lomandraceae) provides a possible example. Lomandra is comprised entirely of dioecious species with type II female flowers (Payer, 1857 ; Watson and Dallwitz, 1992 ). Chase et al. (1995) place Lomandra sister to the hermaphroditic genus Sowerbaea (Lomandraceae). The flowers of Sowerbaea have 3–6 stamens and three carpels. The female flowers of Lomandra have three carpels as well. Because carpel number remains the same, the stamens were most likely lost rather than transformed during the transition to unisexuality.

The third possible scenario that would result in the apparent "direct" evolution of type II flowers involves extinction of taxa (direct–extinction). In this case, type II flowers arise in the manner described for indirect origins, that is via a type I intermediate; however, there is subsequent extinction of type I taxa from the clade. The distribution of flower types within a phylogeny would (erroneously) indicate a direct transition from hermaphroditic to unisexual flowers, whereas the actual developmental evolution required multiple steps. This scenario might be expected for those lineages in which the origin of dioecy is relatively ancient or in which extinction rates are particularly high.

Developmental and phylogenetic analyses of additional dioecious taxa are needed to fully assess these hypotheses for the homoplastic origins of type II unisexual flowers. Nevertheless, it is clear that although unisexual flowers that lack rudiments of the nonfunctional organs share a common morphology, they should not be considered as a single type. This "type II morphology" is the result of convergence via several distinct evolutionary developmental transitions. Similarly, exploration of the development of unisexual flowers that bear rudiments of nonfunctional organs (type I flowers) is likely to show that this is not a single type either. Termination of androecial or gynoecial development could occur at many different stages and by diverse mechanisms (Ainsworth, 2000 ; Mitchell, 2003 ), all of which would result in a unisexual flower with type I morphology.

Recognition of multiple developmental origins of unisexual flowers may further refine investigations of the origins of dioecy and evolutionary dynamics within dioecious lineages. For example, does the rarity of the indirect origin of type II flowers (unisexual from inception; pathway 3 in Figs. 2, 7) suggest that nonfunctional reproductive organs are maintained by natural selection, perhaps by requirements for pollinator recognition (e.g., Ågren and Schemske, 1991 ; Vamosi and Otto, 2002 )? Are particular developmental transitions associated with particular pathways for the origin of dioecy? Because gynodioecy typically evolves via cytoplasmic male sterility loci (Saumitou-Laprade et al., 1994 ) that disrupt stamen development post-initiation (Goldberg et al., 1993 ), the presence of type I staminate flowers (bearing rudimentary stamens) in a dioecious taxon might suggest that the evolution of separate sexes occurred via a gynodioecious intermediate.

Conclusions
The historically typological approach to categorization of unisexual flowers has masked evolutionary dynamics and transitions among "types." Rather than sorting unisexual flowers into mutually exclusive types (Fig. 1), the morphology of unisexual flowers can be viewed as the result of modifications within a multifaceted developmental framework (Fig. 7). Loss of reproductive organ function can occur via diverse mechanisms and at any point in the developmental continuum, from organ inception to maturation.

Our analysis has focused on morphology and developmental transitions from hermaphroditic to unisexual flowers. The evolution of flower development, however, occurs within the context of organismal history. For example, the different pathways for the evolution of dioecy invoke the origin of unisexual flowers at different stages (Webb, 1999 ). When dioecy evolves via gynodioecy, the evolution of unisexual flowers is coincident with the evolution of unisexual individuals (females). In contrast, an origin via monoecy involves the origin of unisexual flowers prior to the separation of sexes. Future work should attempt to integrate information about floral morphology and development into analyses of particular pathways of the evolution of dioecy.

FOOTNOTES

1 The authors thank William (Ned) Friedman, Tom Ranker, Jill Miller, Larry Hufford, and Steven Vamosi for comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. P. K. D. was supported by National Science Foundation DEB 9982489, and C. H. M. is grateful for support from the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Colorado. Back

2 Author for correspondence (e-mail: pamela.diggle{at}colorado.edu ) Back

LITERATURE CITED

Ågren J. D. W. Schemske 1991 Pollination by deceit in a neotropical monoecious herb, Begonia involucrata. Biotropica 23: 235-241[CrossRef][ISI]

Ainsworth C. 2000 Boys and girls come out to play: the molecular biology of dioecious plants. Annals of Botany 86: 211-221[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Ashman T.-A. 1999 Determinants of sex allocation in a gynodioecious wild strawberry: implications for the evolution of dioecy and sexual dimorphism. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 12: 648-661[CrossRef][ISI]

Barrett S. C. H. 1990 The evolution and adaptive significance of heterostyly. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 5: 144-148[CrossRef]

Barrett S. C. H. 2002 The evolution of plant sexual diversity. Nature Reviews Genetics 3: 274-284[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

Barrett S. C. H. J. S. Shore 1987 Variation and evolution of breeding systems in the Turnera-ulmifolia L complex (Turneraceae). Evolution 41: 340-354[CrossRef][ISI]

Barrett S. C. H L. D. Harder A. C. Worley 1997 The comparative biology of pollination and mating in flowering plants. In J. Silvertown, M. Franco, and J. L. Harper [eds.], Plant life histories, 57–76. Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK

Baum D. A. M. J. Donoghue 2002 Transference of function, heterotopy and the evolution of plant development. In C. B. Cronk, R. M. Bateman, and J. A. Hawkins [eds.], Developmental genetics and plant evolution. Taylor and Francis, London, UK

Bawa K. 1980 Evolution of dioecy in flowering plants. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 11: 15-39

Bogler D. J. B. B. Simpson 1996 Phylogeny of Agavaceae based on ITS rDNA sequence variation. American Journal of Botany 8: 1225-1235

Brooks D. R. 1996 Explanations of homoplasy at different levels of biological organization. In M. J. Sanderson and L. Hufford [eds.], Homoplasy: the recurrence of similarity in evolution, 3–36. Academic Press, San Diego, California, USA

Brunet J. D. Charlesworth 1995 Floral sex allocation in sequentially blooming plants. Evolution 49: 70-79[CrossRef][ISI]

Campbell C. S. M. J. Donoghue B. G. Baldwin M. F. Wojciechowski 1995 Phylogenetic relationships in Maloideae (Rosaceae): evidence from sequences of the internal transcribed spacers of nuclear ribosomal DNA and its congruence with morphology. American Journal of Botany 82: 903-918[CrossRef][ISI]

Charlesworth D. 1999 Theories of the evolution of dioecy. In M. A. Geber, T. E. Dawson, and L. F. Delph [eds.], Gender dimorphism in flowering plants, 33–60. Springer-Verlag, New York, New York, USA

Charlesworth B. D. Charlesworth 1978a A model for the evolution of dioecy and gynodioecy. American Naturalist 112: 975-997[CrossRef][ISI]

Charlesworth D. B. Charlesworth 1978b Population genetics of partial male-sterility and evolution of monoecy and dioecy. Heredity 41: 137-153[ISI]

Charlesworth D. B. Charlesworth 1981 Allocation of resources to male and female functions in hermaphrodites. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 15: 57-74

Charlesworth D. D. S. Guttman 1999 The evolution of dioecy and plant sex chromosome systems. In C. C. Ainsworth [ed.], Sex determination in plants, 25–49. Bios Scientific, Oxford, UK

Chase M. W. M. R. Duvall H. G. Hills J. G. Conran A. V. Cox L. E. Eguiarte J. Hartwell 1995 Molecular phylogenetics of Lilianae. In P. J. Rudall, P. J. Cribb, D. F. Cutler, and C. J. Humphries [eds.], Monocotyledons: systematics and evolution, 109–137. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK

Coen E. S. E. M. Meyerowitz 1991 The war of the whorls: genetic interaction controlling flower development. Nature 353: 31-37[CrossRef][Medline]

Darwin C. 1877 The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species. Murray, London, UK

Delph L. F. 2003 Sexual dimorphism in gender plasticity and its consequences for breeding system evolution. Evolution and Development 5: 34-39

Delph L. F. L. F. Galloway M. L. Stanton 1996 Sexual dimorphism in flower size. American Naturalist 148: 299-320[CrossRef][ISI]

Dellaporta S. L. A. Calderon-Urrea 1993 Sex determination in flowering plants. Plant Cell 5: 1241-1251[Free Full Text]

Dorken M. E. S. C. H. Barrett 2004 Sex determination and the evolution of dioecy from monoecy in Sagittaria latifolia (Alismataceae). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B, Biological Sciences 271: 213-219[CrossRef]

Downie S. R. J. D. Palmer 1994 A chloroplast DNA phylogeny of the Caryophyllales based on structural and inverted repeat restriction site variation. Systematic Botany 19: 236-252[CrossRef][ISI]

Eldenas P. K. H. P. Linder 2000 Congruence and complementarity of morphological and trnL-trnF sequence data and the phylogeny of the African Restionaceae. Systematic Botany 24: 692-707

Freeman D. C. K. T. Harper E. L. Charnov 1980 Sex change in plants: old and new observations and new hypotheses. Oecologia 47: 222-232[CrossRef][ISI]

Gadek P. A. E. S. Fernando C. J. Quinn S. B. Hoot T. Terrazas M. C. Sheahan M. W. Chase 1996 Sapindales: molecular delimitation and infraordinal groups. American Journal of Botany 83: 802-811[CrossRef][ISI]

Goldberg R. B. T. P. Beals P. M. Sanders 1993 Anther development: basic principles and practical applications. Plant Cell 5: 1217-1229[Free Full Text]

Graham S. W. R. G. Olmstead 2000 Utility of 17 chloroplast genes for inferring the phylogeny of the basal angiosperms. American Journal of Botany 87: 1712-1730[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Graham S. W. P. A. Reeves A. C. E. Burns R. G. Olmstead 2000 Microstructural changes in noncoding chloroplast DNA: interpretation, evolution, and utility of indels and inversions in basal angiosperm phylogenetic inference. International Journal of Plant Sciences 161: (Supplement) S83-S96[CrossRef]

Harden G. J. [ed.] 2000 Flora of New South Wales. University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Heilbuth J. C. 2000 Lower species richness in dioecious clades. American Naturalist 156: 221-242[CrossRef][ISI]

Heslop-Harrison J. 1957 The experimental modification of sex expression in flowering plants. Biological Review 32: 38-90[CrossRef]

Heslop-Harrison J. 1958 The unisexual flower—a reply to criticism. Phytomorphology 8: 177-184

Hoot S. B. S. Magallón P. R. Crane 1999 Phylogeny of basal eudicots based on three molecular data sets: atpB, rbcL, and 18S nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 86: 1-32

Hufford L. 1996 Ontogenetic evolution, clade diversification, and homoplasy. In M. J. Sanderson and L. Hufford [eds.], Homoplasy: the recurrence of similarity in evolution, 271–301. Academic Press, San Diego, California, USA

Hufford L. 1997 The roles of ontogenetic evolution in the origins of floral homoplasies. International Journal of Plant Sciences 158: (Supplement) : S65-S80[CrossRef][ISI]

Hufford L. M. L. Moody D. E. Soltis 2001 A phylogenetic analysis of Hydrangeaceae based on sequences of the plastid gene matK and their combination with rbcL and morphological data. International Journal of Plant Sciences 162: 835-846[CrossRef]

Larson A. J. B. Losos 1996 Phylogenetic systematics of adaptation. In M. R. Rose and G. V. Lauder [eds.], Adaptation, 187–220. Academic Press, San Diego, California, USA

Lebel-Hardenack S. S. R. Grant 1997 Genetics of sex determination in flowering plants. Trends in Plant Science 2: 130-136[CrossRef][ISI]

Li P. M. O. Johnston 2000 Heterochrony in plant evolutionary studies through the twentieth century. Botanical Review 66: 57-88[ISI]

Lindsay R. H. 1930 The chromosomes of some dioecious angiosperms. American Journal of Botany 17: 152-174[CrossRef][ISI]

Lloyd D. G. 1980 The distribution of gender in four angiosperm species illustrating two evolutionary pathways to dioecy. Evolution 34: 123-134[CrossRef][ISI]

Maddison D. R. W. P. Maddison 2001 MacClade 4: analysis of phylogeny and character evolution. Sinauer, Sunderland, Massachusetts, USA

Manos P. S. K. P. Steele 1997 Phylogenetic analyses of "higher" Hamamelididae based on plastid sequence data. American Journal of Botany 84: 1407-1419[Abstract]

Mathews S. M. J. Donoghue 1999 The root of angiosperm phylogeny inferred from duplicate phytochrome genes. Science 286: 947-950[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Mitchell C. 2003 Breaking down dioecy: morphology, phylogeny, and developmental evolution of unisexual flowers. M.S. thesis, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA

Parkinson C. L. K. L. Adams J. D. Palmer 1999 Multigene analyses identify the three earliest lineages of extant flowering plants. Current Biology 9: 1485-1488[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

Payer J.-B. 1857 Traité d'organogénie comparée de la fleur. V. Masson, Paris, France

Persson C. 2000 Phylogeny of the neotropical Alibertia group (Rubiaceae), with emphasis on the genus Alibertia, inferred from ITS and 5S ribosomal DNA sequences. American Journal of Botany 87: 1018-1028[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Philippe H. G. Lecointre H. L. Van Le H. Le Guyader 1996 A critical study of homoplasy in molecular data with the use of a morphologically based cladogram, and its consequences for character weighting. Molecular Biology and Evolution 13: 1174-1186[ISI]

Plunkett G. M. D. E. Soltis P. S. Soltis 1996 Higher level relationships of Apiales (Apiaceae and Araliaceae) based on phylogenetic analysis of rbcL sequences. American Journal of Botany 83: 499-515[CrossRef][ISI]

Qiu Y.-L. J. Lee F. Bernasconi-Quadroni D. E. Soltis P. S. Soltis M. Zanis E. A. Zimmer Z. Chen V. Savolainen M. W. Chase 1999 The earliest angiosperms: evidence from mitochondrial, plastid and nuclear genomes. Nature 402: 404-407

Qiu Y.-L. J. Lee F. Bernasconi-Quadroni D. E. Soltis P. S. Soltis M. Zanis E. A. Zimmer Z. Chen V. Savolainen M. W. Chase 2000 Phylogeny of basal angiosperms: analyses of five genes from three genomes. International Journal of Plant Sciences 161: (Supplement) S3-S27[CrossRef][ISI]

Radford A. E. H. E. Ahles R. C. Bell 1968 Manual of the vascular flora of the Carolinas. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA

Ree R. H. M. J. Donoghue 1998 Step matrices and the interpretation of homoplasy. Systematic Biology 47: 582-588[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

Renner S. S. 1999 Circumscription and phylogeny of the Laurales: evidence from molecular and morphological data. American Journal of Botany 86: 1301-1315[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Renner S. S. R. E. Ricklefs 1995 Dioecy and its correlates in the flowering plants. American Journal of Botany 82: 596-606[CrossRef][ISI]

Renner S. S. H. S. Won 2001 Repeated evolution of dioecy from monoecy in Siparunaceae (Laurales). Systematic Biology 50: 700-712[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

Rodman J. E. P. S. Soltis D. E. Soltis K. J. Sytsma K. G. Karol 1998 Parallel evolution of glucosinolate biosynthesis inferred from congruent nuclear and plastid gene phylogenies. American Journal of Botany 85: 997-1006[Abstract]

Sanderson M. J. M. J. Donoghue 1989 Patterns of variation in levels of homoplasy. Evolution 43: 1781-1795[CrossRef][ISI]

Sanderson M. J. L. Hufford [eds.] 1996 Homoplasy: the recurrence of similarity in evolution. Academic Press, San Diego, California, USA

Sattler R. 1973 Organogenesis of flowers: a photographic text-atlas. University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Saumitou-Laprade P. J. Cuguen P. Vernet 1994 Cytoplasmic male sterility in plants: molecular evidence and the nucleocytoplasmic conflict. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9: 431-435[CrossRef]

Schwarz-Sommer Z. P. Huijser W. Nacken H. Saedler H. Sommer 1990 Genetic control of flower development by homeotic genes in Antirrhinum majus. Science 250: 931-936[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Seger J. V. M. Eckhart 1996 Evolution of sexual systems and sex allocation in annual plants when growth and reproduction overlap. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 263: 833-841[CrossRef]

Smyth D. R. 2001 Flower development. Current Biology 10: R82-R84

Soltis D. E. R. K. Kuzoff E. Conti R. Gornall K. Ferguson 1996 matK and rbcL gene sequence data indicate that Saxifraga (Saxifragaceae) is polyphyletic. American Journal of Botany 83: 371-382[CrossRef][ISI]

Soltis P. S. D. E. Soltis M. W. Chase 1999 Angiosperm phylogeny inferred from multiple genes as a research tool for comparative biology. Nature 402: 402-404

Soltis D. E. P. S. Soltis M. W. Chase F M. E. Mort D. C. Albach M. Zanis V. Savolainen W. H. Hahn S. B. Hoot M. F. Fay M. Axtell S. M. Swensen L. M. Prince W. J. Kress K. C. Nixon J. S. Farris 2000 Angiosperm phylogeny inferred from 18S rDNA, rbcL, and atpB sequences. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 133: 381-461[CrossRef]

Ståhl B. 1996 The relationships of Heberdenia bahamensis and H. penduliflora (Myrsinaceae). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 122: 315-333[CrossRef]

Storey W. B. 1969 Pistillate papaya flower: a morphological anomaly. Science 163: 401-405[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Thomson J. D. S. C. H. Barrett 1981 Selection for outcrossing, sexual selection, and the evolution of dioecy in plants. American Naturalist 118: 443-449[CrossRef][ISI]

Thomson J. D. J. Brunet 1990 Hypotheses for the evolution of dioecy in seed plants. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 5: 11-16

Vamosi J. C. S. P. Otto 2002 When looks can kill: the evolution of sexually dimorphic floral display and the extinction of dioecious plants. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B 269: 1187-1194[CrossRef]

van Welzen P. C. 1998 Revisions and phylogenies of Malesian Euphorbiaceae: subtribe Lasiococcinae (Homonoia, Lasiococca, Spathiostemon) and Clonostylis, Ricinus, and Wetria. Blumea 43: 131-164[ISI]

Warwick S. I. L. D. Black 1997 Phylogenetic implications of chloroplast DNA restriction site variation in subtribes Raphaninae and Cakilinae (Brassicaceae, tribe Brassicaceae). Canadian Journal of Botany 75: 960-973[ISI]

Watson L. M. J. Dallwitz 1992 The families of flowering plants: descriptions, illustrations, identification, and information retrieval. Website http://biodiversity.uno.edu/delta/angio. [Accessed 13 May 2005]

Webb C. J. 1999 Empirical studies: Evolution and maintenance of dimorphic breeding systems. In M. A. Geber, T. E. Dawson, and L. F. Delph [eds.], Gender and sexual dimorphism in flowering plants. Springer, Berlin, Germany

Weiblen G. D. R. K. Oyama M. J. Donoghue 2000 Phylogenetic analysis of dioecy in monocotyledons. American Naturalist 155: 46-58[CrossRef][Medline]

Wiens J. J. P. T. Chippindale D. M. Hillis 2003 When are phylogenetic analyses misled by convergence? A case study in Texas cave salamanders. Systematic Biology 52: 501-514[ISI][Medline]

Wiersema J. H. B. Leon 1999 Taxonomic information on cultivated plants in the USDA-ARS Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN). Proceedings of Second International Symposium on the Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants in Seattle, Washington, USA. Website http://www.ars-grin.gov/npgs/tax/index.html

Yampolsky C. H. Yampolsky 1922 Distribution of sex forms in the phanerogamic flora. Bibliotheca Genetica 3: 1-62

Zanis M. J. D. E. Soltis P. S. Soltis S. Mathews M. J. Donoghue 2002 The root of angiosperms revisited. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 99: 6846-6853




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Am. J. Bot.Home page
M. S. Kinney, J. T. Columbus, and E. A. Friar
Unisexual flower, spikelet, and inflorescence development in monoecious/dioecious Bouteloua dimorpha (Poaceae, Chloridoideae)
Am. J. Botany, February 1, 2008; 95(2): 123 - 132.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Supplementary Data
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in ISI Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via ISI Web of Science (1)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.
Agricola
Right arrow Articles by Mitchell, C. H.
Right arrow Articles by Diggle, P. K.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS