The systematic value of flower structure in Crotalaria and related genera of the tribe Crotalarieae (Fabaceae)

Margaretha Marianne Le Roux, Ben Erik Van Wyk

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22 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Flowers in the tribe Crotalarieae of the family Fabaceae are generally adapted to bee pollination mechanisms. Molecular systematics have recently provided a major step towards a profound insight into generic relationships, thereby creating the opportunity to re-evaluate the taxonomic and functional significance of flower structure in the tribe, with emphasis on the large genus . Crotalaria. A representative sample of flowers from 211 species was dissected to record morphological character states. These data were supplemented from the literature to allow for generalizations for the tribe as a whole. Six structural-functional flower types were identified: (1) pump; (2) gullet; (3) hugging; (4) saddle; (5) tunnel and (6) brush (saddle and tunnel types described here for the first time). . Crotalaria uniquely has the brush type, characterized by a rostrate keel, highly dimorphic anthers, stylar trichomes and elaborate callosities on the standard petal. Remarkably, . Crotalaria and . Bolusia are the only genera of the tribe Crotalarieae with callosities present in all of the species. In other genera, callosities are generally absent or infrequent. Trends towards specialization of pollination syndromes are apparent as assemblages of apomorphic states that co-occur in what we refer to here as " specialized flowers" ; individual characters are labile or non-homologous (e.g. callosities) and diagnostically less valuable. Unique combinations of flower characters are often useful to support current generic concepts in Crotalarieae.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)414-426
Number of pages13
JournalFlora: Morphology, Distribution, Functional Ecology of Plants
Volume207
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2012

Keywords

  • Anther dimorphism
  • Callosities
  • Crotalaria
  • Pollination mechanism
  • Saddle type flowers
  • Tunnel type flowers

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Ecology
  • Plant Science

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