Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/63304
Type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Clade-specific responses regulate phenological patterns in Neotropical Myrtaceae
Authors: Staggemeier, Vanessa G.
Diniz-Filho, José Alexandre F.
Zipparro, Valesca B.
Gressler, Eliana
Castro, Everaldo Rodrigo de
Mazine, Fiorella
Costa, Itayguara Ribeiro da
Lucas, Eve
Morellato, Leonor Patrícia C.
Keywords: Evolutionary models;K-statistic;Flowering;Fruiting;Phylogenetic signal;Phylogenetic eigenvector regression;Resource availability
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
Citation: STAGGEMEIER, Vanessa G. et al. Clade-specific responses regulate phenological patterns in Neotropical Myrtaceae. Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, [s. l.], v. 17, n. 6, p. 476-490, 2015.
Abstract: Understanding plant reproduction from an eco-phylogenetic perspective is essential because it allows us to predict how phenology could change in response to climatic changes. Unfortunately, reproductive patterns have been poorly explored in contemporary phylogenetic context until now. Closely related species are expected to reproduce in a similar ecological niche if phylogeny constrains the time of flowering and fruiting. In contrast, if climate determines phenology regardless of species affinities, species would randomly reproduce along favourable temporal axes. In this study, we used a clade of Neotropical Myrtaceae to test the influence of phylogenetic signal (PS) in phenology. Myrtaceae is the eighth largest angiosperm plant family in the world and the most speciose in the Atlantic rainforest. We reconstructed phylogenetic relationships among 57 Myrteae species plus an outgroup and quantified PS across three Atlantic rainforest communities: Saibadela, Cardoso and Picinguaba. Ecological factors were the main drivers of plant phenology. However, PS in plant reproduction was detected for flowering in Cardoso, suggesting a clade-specific response because flowering was conservative in the Gomidesia group. Fruiting in Saibadela also exhibited PS with phenological divergence between taxa with similar embryo shape and conservative fruiting time inside these groups, indicating that seed germination requirement can affect fruiting phenology. We suggest that investigation of PS in phenology should consider phylogenetic non-stationarity because evolutionary rates and ecological patterns are variable across taxa and often variable in short time scales. The identification of clades with conservative phenology, indicates the taxa most sensitive to climate change that can guide future conservation initiatives.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/63304
Access Rights: Acesso Aberto
Appears in Collections:DBIO - Artigos publicados em revista científica

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