4.4 Article

Transitions between the Terrestrial and Epiphytic Habit Drove the Evolution of Seed-Aerodynamic Traits in Orchids

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 195, Issue 2, Pages 275-283

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/706905

Keywords

dust seeds; seed airspace; phylogenetic comparative methods; seed dispersal distance; wind dispersal

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China (NSFC)-Yunnan jointed projects [U1402267, U1702235]
  2. Glasstone Research Fellowship in Science at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom
  3. Junior Research Fellowship at Queen's College at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom

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Orchids are globally distributed, a feature often attributed to their tiny dustlike seeds. They were ancestrally terrestrial but in the Eocene expanded into tree canopies, with some lineages later returning to the ground, providing an evolutionarily replicated system. Because seeds are released closer to the ground in terrestrial species than in epiphytic ones, seed traits in terrestrials may have been under selective pressure to increase seed dispersal efficiency. In this study, we test the expectations that seed airspace-a trait known to increase seed flotation time in the air-is (i) larger in terrestrial lineages and (ii) has increased following secondary returns to a terrestrial habit. We quantified and scored 20 seed traits in 121 species and carried out phylogenetically informed analyses. Results strongly support both expectations, suggesting that aerodynamic traits even in dust seeds are under selection to increase dispersal ability, following shifts in average release heights correlated with changes in habit.

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