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Concerted anatomical change associated with crassulacean acid metabolism in the Bromeliaceae

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Males, JO 

Abstract

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a celebrated example of convergent evolution in plant ecophysiology. However, many unanswered questions surround the relationships among CAM, anatomy and morphology during evolutionary transitions in photosynthetic pathway. An excellent group in which to explore these issues is the Bromeliaceae, a diverse monocot family from the Neotropics in which CAM has evolved multiple times. Progress in the resolution of phylogenetic relationships among the bromeliads is opening new and exciting opportunities to investigate how evolutionary changes in leaf structure has tracked, or perhaps preceded, photosynthetic innovation. This paper presents an analysis of variation in leaf anatomical parameters across 163 C3 and CAM bromeliad species, demonstrating a clear divergence in the fundamental aspects of leaf structure in association with the photosynthetic pathway. Most strikingly, the mean volume of chlorenchyma cells of CAM species is 22 times higher than that of C3 species. In two bromeliad subfamilies (Pitcairnioideae and Tillandsioideae), independent transitions from C3 to CAM are associated with increased cell succulence, whereas evolutionary trends in tissue thickness and leaf air space content differ between CAM origins. Overall, leaf anatomy is clearly and strongly coupled with the photosynthetic pathway in the Bromeliaceae, where the independent origins of CAM have involved significant anatomical restructuring.

Description

Keywords

functional anatomy, succulence, vascular epiphytes, xerophytism

Journal Title

Functional Plant Biology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1445-4408
1445-4416

Volume Title

45

Publisher

CSIRO
Sponsorship
NERC (1359020)
JM received funding from Natural Environment Research Council award 1359020 and received a Bromeliad Society International Harry Luther Scholarship to perform research at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens (MSBG).