Darwin’s early work on heterostyly and related style polymorphisms (the presence of two or three style morphs within a population) generated much interest to understand how precise interactions between ecological and genetic mechanisms influence the evolution of floral diversity. Here we tested three key hypotheses proposed to explain the evolution of heterostyly: i)the presence of self-incompatibility, ii) the role of pollinators in promoting dissasortative mating, and iii) floral architecture, which restricts pollinators’ movements and ensures more exact pollen deposition on their bodies. We combined data from experiments, field observations, and published studies to test whether evolution of style polymorphism in Narcissus is driven by t...
1. In hermaphroditic flowers, reciprocal herkogamy e.g. heterostyly enhances pollen transfer between...
Heterostyly, i.e. the reciprocal positioning of anthers and stigmas, is a floral polymorphism that i...
Evolution to reduce inbreeding can favor disassortative (inter-morph) over assortative (intramorph) ...
Darwin’s early work on heterostyly and related style polymorphisms (the presence of two or three sty...
Darwin's early work on heterostyly and related style polymorphisms (the presence of two or thre...
Evolution to reduce inbreeding can favor disassortative (inter-morph) over assortative (intra-morph)...
Different strategies to reduce selfing and promote outcrossing have evolved in hermaphroditic flower...
Pollinator-mediated evolutionary divergence has seldom been explored in generalist clades because it...
Premise: Flower phenotypes evolve to attract pollinators and to ensure efficient pollen transfer to ...
Most heterostylous species show self- and intra-morph incompatibility and models established for suc...
Abstract Here, we review recent progress on the evolutionary history, functional ecology, genetics a...
Most heterostylous plants possess a reciprocal arrangement of stigmas and anthers (reciprocal herkog...
This thesis examines the role pollinators have played in the diversification of flowering plants. T...
The evolution of the flower is commonly thought to have spurred angiosperm diversification. Similarl...
1. In hermaphroditic flowers, reciprocal herkogamy e.g. heterostyly enhances pollen transfer between...
Heterostyly, i.e. the reciprocal positioning of anthers and stigmas, is a floral polymorphism that i...
Evolution to reduce inbreeding can favor disassortative (inter-morph) over assortative (intramorph) ...
Darwin’s early work on heterostyly and related style polymorphisms (the presence of two or three sty...
Darwin's early work on heterostyly and related style polymorphisms (the presence of two or thre...
Evolution to reduce inbreeding can favor disassortative (inter-morph) over assortative (intra-morph)...
Different strategies to reduce selfing and promote outcrossing have evolved in hermaphroditic flower...
Pollinator-mediated evolutionary divergence has seldom been explored in generalist clades because it...
Premise: Flower phenotypes evolve to attract pollinators and to ensure efficient pollen transfer to ...
Most heterostylous species show self- and intra-morph incompatibility and models established for suc...
Abstract Here, we review recent progress on the evolutionary history, functional ecology, genetics a...
Most heterostylous plants possess a reciprocal arrangement of stigmas and anthers (reciprocal herkog...
This thesis examines the role pollinators have played in the diversification of flowering plants. T...
The evolution of the flower is commonly thought to have spurred angiosperm diversification. Similarl...
1. In hermaphroditic flowers, reciprocal herkogamy e.g. heterostyly enhances pollen transfer between...
Heterostyly, i.e. the reciprocal positioning of anthers and stigmas, is a floral polymorphism that i...
Evolution to reduce inbreeding can favor disassortative (inter-morph) over assortative (intramorph) ...