Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 96, Issue 2, Pages 391-408Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.0800142
Keywords
adaptation; Cactaceae; character evolution; homoplasy; Portulacaceae; Portulacineae; stem photosynthesis; vegetative anatomy
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The cacti have undergone extensive specialization in their evolutionary history, providing an excellent system in which to address large-scale questions of morphological and physiological adaptation. Recent molecular phylogenetic studies suggest that (I) Pereskia, the leafy genus long interpreted as the sister group of all other cacti, is likely paraphyletic, and (2) Cactaceae arc nested within a paraphyletic Portulacaceae as a member of the ACPT clade (Anacampseroteae, Cactaceae, Portulaca, and Talinum). We collected new data on the vegetative anatomy of the ACPT clade and relatives to evaluate whether patterns in the distributions of traits may provide insight into early events in the evolutionary transition to the cactus life form. Many traits had high levels of homoplasy and were mostly equivocal with regard to infraclade relationships of ACPT, although several characters do lend further support to a paraphyletic Pereskia. These include a thick stem cuticle, prominent stem mucilage cells, and hypodermal calcium oxalate druses, all of which are likely to be important traits for stein water storage and photosynthesis. We hypothesize that high lability of many putative precursor traits may have been critical in generating the organismal context necessary for the evolution of all efficient and integrated photosynthetic stein.
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