TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlations among fruit traits and evolution of different fruits within Melastomataceae
AU - Clausing, Gudrun
AU - Meyer, Karsten
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank R.E. Ricklefs and H. Bruelheide for statistical advice, J.W. Kadereit and an anonymous reviewer for constructive criticism, J. Rohwer for comments on an early version of the manuscript, N. Cellinese and J. Regalado for identifying species of Sonerileae, A. Berg for drawing Figures 1, 2, and 6, and Barbara Dittmann for preparing microtome sections. Financial support for this project came from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant RE/603/2-1 to S.S. Renner). Field work and collecting of fruit samples was conducted with kind permission of the Perancang Ekonomi Unit, Kuala Lumpur, and Sabah Parks, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. Logistic support came from Kinabalu Park, Sabah, the Sabah Forestry Department in Sandakan, the Institute of Biodiversity and Environmental Conservation of the Universiti Malaysia, Sarawak, the Department of Botany of the National University of Hanoi, and the Department of Biology of Prince of Songkhla University, Hat Yai, Thailand.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - The anatomy and morphology of nearly mature fruits in 85 mainly palaeotropical species of Melastomataceae were examined using microtome- and hand-sectioning, and differential staining. Much structural heterogeneity was observed in both capsules and berries. Multivariate analyses of 31 of the 52 characters recorded for each species, revealed that indehiscence is associated with fusion of ovary and hypanthium tissues, placenta persistence, lack of a persistent endocarp, and a dearth of sclereids in these tissues, while dehiscence is correlated with the opposite states and a persistent exocarp. Other fruit characters such as lignification or fleshiness of tissues do not show a consistent association with dehiscence. Break down of broad fruit types, such as 'berry' and 'capsule', into their individual morphological and anatomical traits shows how unusual fruit types, such as woody berries, fleshy capsules, and capsules containing fleshy placentas (display fruits), which are common in palaeotropical Melastomeae and Dissochaeteae, contribute to a loosening of expected correlations. Thus, discriminant analysis clearly differentiated display Fruits from the other fruit types because of their combination of fleshy placentas with a persistent endocarp and absence of ovary/hypanthium fusion. The evolution of fruit types within Melastomataceae, and especially Dissochaeteae, and their reliability as phylogenetic indicators is discussed in the light of molecular phylogenies for these groups that show that berries and capsules evolved several times independently, explaining the observed heterogeneity of outwardly similar fruits. Fruit diversity within Melastoma, a monophyletic genus of 22 species, provides an example of the plasticity afforded by the particular construction of Melastomataceae fruits, which has contributed to ecological diversification in melastome seed dispersal. (C) 2000 The Linnean Society of London.
AB - The anatomy and morphology of nearly mature fruits in 85 mainly palaeotropical species of Melastomataceae were examined using microtome- and hand-sectioning, and differential staining. Much structural heterogeneity was observed in both capsules and berries. Multivariate analyses of 31 of the 52 characters recorded for each species, revealed that indehiscence is associated with fusion of ovary and hypanthium tissues, placenta persistence, lack of a persistent endocarp, and a dearth of sclereids in these tissues, while dehiscence is correlated with the opposite states and a persistent exocarp. Other fruit characters such as lignification or fleshiness of tissues do not show a consistent association with dehiscence. Break down of broad fruit types, such as 'berry' and 'capsule', into their individual morphological and anatomical traits shows how unusual fruit types, such as woody berries, fleshy capsules, and capsules containing fleshy placentas (display fruits), which are common in palaeotropical Melastomeae and Dissochaeteae, contribute to a loosening of expected correlations. Thus, discriminant analysis clearly differentiated display Fruits from the other fruit types because of their combination of fleshy placentas with a persistent endocarp and absence of ovary/hypanthium fusion. The evolution of fruit types within Melastomataceae, and especially Dissochaeteae, and their reliability as phylogenetic indicators is discussed in the light of molecular phylogenies for these groups that show that berries and capsules evolved several times independently, explaining the observed heterogeneity of outwardly similar fruits. Fruit diversity within Melastoma, a monophyletic genus of 22 species, provides an example of the plasticity afforded by the particular construction of Melastomataceae fruits, which has contributed to ecological diversification in melastome seed dispersal. (C) 2000 The Linnean Society of London.
KW - Berries
KW - Capsules
KW - Dispersal mechanisms
KW - Display fruits
KW - Dissochaeteae
KW - Multivariate analysis
KW - Phylogeny
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0033865010
U2 - 10.1006/bojl.1999.0340
DO - 10.1006/bojl.1999.0340
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033865010
SN - 0024-4074
VL - 133
SP - 303
EP - 326
JO - Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
JF - Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society
IS - 3
ER -