The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity

The distribution of tapetal types in basal angiosperms is reviewed both from the literature and new observations in the context of recent phylogenetic analyses. Secretory tapeta predominate among land plants. The majority of basal angiosperms share a secretory tapetum with their anthophyte ancestors. Plasmodial and invasive tapeta are relatively rare in eudicots but have evolved several times among early-branching angiosperms, especially in monocotyledons, in which they have evolved three or more times. The invasive tapetum has evolved at least four other times independently in basal angiosperms: in Nymphaeaceae, Annonaceae, Monimiaceae, and Winteraceae. Plasmodial tapeta are mostly found in monocotyledons but have evolved at least twice in basal angiosperms, in Annonaceae, and in Hernandiaceae/Lauraceae. This apparent plasticity for a relatively brief but critical time in angiosperm evolution may reflect the early evolution of highly specific pollination syndromes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Furness, Carol A. autor/a, Rudall, Paula J. autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Subjects:Angiospermae, Monocotiledóneas,
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:355802021-11-23T20:46:14ZThe tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity Furness, Carol A. autor/a Rudall, Paula J. autor/a textspaThe distribution of tapetal types in basal angiosperms is reviewed both from the literature and new observations in the context of recent phylogenetic analyses. Secretory tapeta predominate among land plants. The majority of basal angiosperms share a secretory tapetum with their anthophyte ancestors. Plasmodial and invasive tapeta are relatively rare in eudicots but have evolved several times among early-branching angiosperms, especially in monocotyledons, in which they have evolved three or more times. The invasive tapetum has evolved at least four other times independently in basal angiosperms: in Nymphaeaceae, Annonaceae, Monimiaceae, and Winteraceae. Plasmodial tapeta are mostly found in monocotyledons but have evolved at least twice in basal angiosperms, in Annonaceae, and in Hernandiaceae/Lauraceae. This apparent plasticity for a relatively brief but critical time in angiosperm evolution may reflect the early evolution of highly specific pollination syndromes.The distribution of tapetal types in basal angiosperms is reviewed both from the literature and new observations in the context of recent phylogenetic analyses. Secretory tapeta predominate among land plants. The majority of basal angiosperms share a secretory tapetum with their anthophyte ancestors. Plasmodial and invasive tapeta are relatively rare in eudicots but have evolved several times among early-branching angiosperms, especially in monocotyledons, in which they have evolved three or more times. The invasive tapetum has evolved at least four other times independently in basal angiosperms: in Nymphaeaceae, Annonaceae, Monimiaceae, and Winteraceae. Plasmodial tapeta are mostly found in monocotyledons but have evolved at least twice in basal angiosperms, in Annonaceae, and in Hernandiaceae/Lauraceae. This apparent plasticity for a relatively brief but critical time in angiosperm evolution may reflect the early evolution of highly specific pollination syndromes.AngiospermaeMonocotiledóneasInternational Journal of Plant Sciences
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language spa
topic Angiospermae
Monocotiledóneas
Angiospermae
Monocotiledóneas
spellingShingle Angiospermae
Monocotiledóneas
Angiospermae
Monocotiledóneas
Furness, Carol A. autor/a
Rudall, Paula J. autor/a
The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
description The distribution of tapetal types in basal angiosperms is reviewed both from the literature and new observations in the context of recent phylogenetic analyses. Secretory tapeta predominate among land plants. The majority of basal angiosperms share a secretory tapetum with their anthophyte ancestors. Plasmodial and invasive tapeta are relatively rare in eudicots but have evolved several times among early-branching angiosperms, especially in monocotyledons, in which they have evolved three or more times. The invasive tapetum has evolved at least four other times independently in basal angiosperms: in Nymphaeaceae, Annonaceae, Monimiaceae, and Winteraceae. Plasmodial tapeta are mostly found in monocotyledons but have evolved at least twice in basal angiosperms, in Annonaceae, and in Hernandiaceae/Lauraceae. This apparent plasticity for a relatively brief but critical time in angiosperm evolution may reflect the early evolution of highly specific pollination syndromes.
format Texto
topic_facet Angiospermae
Monocotiledóneas
author Furness, Carol A. autor/a
Rudall, Paula J. autor/a
author_facet Furness, Carol A. autor/a
Rudall, Paula J. autor/a
author_sort Furness, Carol A. autor/a
title The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
title_short The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
title_full The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
title_fullStr The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
title_full_unstemmed The tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
title_sort tapetum in basal angiosperms early diversity
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AT rudallpaulajautora thetapetuminbasalangiospermsearlydiversity
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AT rudallpaulajautora tapetuminbasalangiospermsearlydiversity
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