Widespread evolution of poricidal flowers: a striking example of morphological convergence across flowering plants
Abstract
The evolution of tube-like floral morphologies that control pollen release via small openings (functionally poricidal flowers) represents a taxonomically and geographically widespread instance of repeated and independent evolution of a functionally similar morphology. Poricidal flowers are also often closely associated with buzz pollination by bees. Yet we lack an updated angiosperm-wide survey of their phylogenetic distribution. We identify all known angiosperm genera containing poricidal flowers via a literature survey. We determined their phylogenetic distribution and minimum number of independent gains and losses via a species-level angiosperm-wide phylogeny. We estimated if evolution of poricidal flowers is associated with changes in speciation/extinction via diversification rate analyses. Poricidal flowers occur across 87 angiosperm families and 639 genera containing > 28,000 species. At the species level, an average of 205 independent gains and 215 losses of poricidal flowers occurred. Angiosperm-wide analyses suggest an early burst in poricidal evolution, but no differences in net diversification (origination-extinction) between non-poricidal and poricidal taxa. Analyses for two focal families however indicate strong context-dependent effects of poricidal flowers on diversification. Poricidal evolution thus represents a large-scale example of convergent evolution in floral form, but effects on diversification appear to be strongly contingent on phylogenetic and ecological background.
Department(s)
Biology
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1093/evolut/qpaf220
Keywords
Bees, buzz pollination, convergent evolution, diversification analysis, poricidal anthers, poricidal flowers
Publication Date
1-1-2026
Recommended Citation
Russell, Avery L.; Zenil-Ferguson, Rosana; Buchmann, Stephen L.; Jolles, Diana D.; Kriebel, Ricardo; and Vallejo-Marín, Mario, "Widespread evolution of poricidal flowers: a striking example of morphological convergence across flowering plants" (2026). Faculty Scholarship. 74.
https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/articles00/74
Journal Title
Evolution