2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-017-0938-7
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Exploring the evolutionary origin of floral organs of Erycina pusilla, an emerging orchid model system

Abstract: BackgroundThousands of flowering plant species attract pollinators without offering rewards, but the evolution of this deceit is poorly understood. Rewardless flowers of the orchid Erycina pusilla have an enlarged median sepal and incised median petal (‘lip’) to attract oil-collecting bees. These bees also forage on similar looking but rewarding Malpighiaceae flowers that have five unequally sized petals and gland-carrying sepals. The lip of E. pusilla has a ‘callus’ that, together with winged ‘stelidia’, mimi… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
(76 reference statements)
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“…Our results agree with previous work reporting SEP ‐like genes from orchids are expressed in all flower organs during development (Xu et al , Chang et al , Acri‐Nunes‐Miranda and Mondragon‐Palomino , Pan et al , Lin et al , Dirks‐Mulder et al ). These suggest SEP ‐like genes in orchids are involved in identifying properties of all four floral organ whorls.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Our results agree with previous work reporting SEP ‐like genes from orchids are expressed in all flower organs during development (Xu et al , Chang et al , Acri‐Nunes‐Miranda and Mondragon‐Palomino , Pan et al , Lin et al , Dirks‐Mulder et al ). These suggest SEP ‐like genes in orchids are involved in identifying properties of all four floral organ whorls.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Interestingly, no AGL6 expression was detected in the early oral buds or any of the mature organs of C. sandersonii owers that are all radially symmetric. This nding is in contrast with previous ndings of Pabón-Mora et al (26), who detected AGL6 expression in the bilaterally symmetric sepals and ovules of the pipevine Aristolochia mbriata and Dirks-Mulder et al (33) and Pramanik et al (34), who detected AGL6 expression in the bilaterally symmetric sepals, petals, stelidia and gynostemium in the rst, second, third and fourth whorl of the owers of the orchid species Erycina pusilla, Phaelonopsis equestris and P. pulcherrima.…”
Section: Mads-box Genes Driving Oral Organ Identitycontrasting
confidence: 98%
“…No E-class gene expression was found in the mature corona of Ceropegia sandersonii. In the callus on the orchid labellum, also an organ of staminal identity (33,34), E-class gene expression was found. Expression was more pronounced in early than late developmental stages of the callus and thus, E-class gene expression may take place in the early stage Ceropegia corona as well.…”
Section: Mads-box Genes Driving Oral Organ Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Spurred sepals and petals often contain nectar or other rewards for relatively long-tongued pollinators. The function of stelidia is increasingly uncovered as positioning short-tonged pollinators in an orchid flower so that specific body parts are exposed to the rostellum and/or stigma to promote removal or deposition of pollinia (Dirks-Mulder & al., 2017). It might be that the species previously recognized as genus Bracisepalum are pollinated by relatively long-tongued Lepidoptera that hover in front of the flowers rather than landing on them so that the need for stelidia disappeared; further pollination studies are needed to support or reject this hypothesis.…”
Section: Version Of Recordmentioning
confidence: 99%