Plant \'bloom\' (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Friday, December 07, 2012, 13:58 (4178 days ago)

Like the Cambrian Explosion flowering plants also exploded. I've mentioned this before. It puzzled Darwin, and the 50 million year 'bloom' is here described, but the reason is still unknown:-http://phys.org/news/2012-12-yields-darwin-abominable-mystery.html

Plant bloom: reason found

by David Turell @, Saturday, January 13, 2018, 19:52 (2314 days ago) @ David Turell

Well, perhaps not the underlying driving force, but what happened to plant DNA to cause the bloom:

https://cosmosmagazine.com/biology/shrinking-to-grow-flowering-plants-conquered-the-wor...

"The Jurassic era was dominated by dinosaurs, conifers and ferns. But around 140 million years ago, at the start of the Cretaceous, flowering plants exploded onto the scene and took over every corner of the planet. This sudden flowering of the planet threatened Darwin’s theory of evolution, which posited a gradual process. He referred to it as “an abominable mystery”.

***

"The driving force that allowed flowering plants to be so successful and so diverse was the downsizing of their genomes.

"That meant they could make more compact cells, “like smaller Lego blocks”, says Simonin. Packing their leaves with breathing pores (known as stomata) and densely branched veins allowed flowering plants to photosynthesise at three times the rate of ferns, and thereby grow much faster.

“'They couldn’t do that without the infrastructure,” says Tim Brodribb of Australia’s University of Tasmania, who researches plant evolution but was not involved with the current study. “This is what allowed them to overrun the planet.”

"Simonin and Roddy suggest the ability of flowering plants to shrink their genomes didn’t just enable better infrastructure, it was also the engine for their explosive diversity.
For centuries, botanists thought that the answer to Darwin’s abominable mystery was the flower itself. Because flowers promote outcrossing – breeding between individuals not closely related – and rely on different species of animals for pollen dispersal, they provide an engine for diversity.

"But that answer did not explain how flowering plants evolved their superior fitness in the first place.

***

"The idea that the size of the nucleus which encapsulates the genome is what determines the size of cells is not new. A relationship between nuclear size and overall cell size has been seen across plant, fungal and animal species, and was outlined in detail in 2005.
"Simonov and Roddy wondered whether genome downsizing was the enabling event that allowed flowering plants to shrink their cells.

"To see if this relationship held across 400 species of ferns, gymnosperms (conifers, cycads and ginkgoes) and flowering plants, they compiled data on the size of guard cells, the density of stomata, the density of leaf veins and the size of their genome.

"They found that the smaller the genome, the tinier the cells and the greater the density of leaf stomata and veins.

"The greatest variation was seen within the flowering plants themselves. A rare Japanese flower, Paris japonica, boasts the planet’s biggest genome at 150 billion base pairs. At the other end of the scale, the carnivorous flower Genlisea aurea boasts the smallest genome for a flowering plant, with 63 million base pairs.

"That’s a size variation of 2300-fold!

"And as the genome size varies, so does the size of nucleus and the overall size of the cell.
The authors propose that this ability to vary genome size, by jettisoning much of their non-functional DNA, allowed plants to alter their cell sizes according to diverse environmental needs. The approach, they say, ultimately explains not just fitness, but also the huge relative diversity of flowering plants. According to a 2016 count, there are more than 295,000 species of flowering plants but only 1000 species of gymnosperms, mostly conifers.

"But while finding a correlation between genome size and cell size is intriguing, it does not prove that one caused the other. To pursue their theory, Simonov says he and Roddy are going to back to examine the fossil record: “If we’re right you’d expect to see genome down-sizing just before an increase in vein density.'”

Comment: Partially explained, but we still do not know why the DNA shrunk. God at work?

Plant bloom: reason found

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 21, 2018, 01:47 (2003 days ago) @ David Turell

Another amber fossil finding pointing to the evolution of flowering plants:

https://cosmosmagazine.com/palaeontology/darwin-s-abominable-mystery-more-apparent-than...

"For 140 years, scientists have been trying to explain what Charles Darwin described as “an abominable mystery”.

"Darwin was bothered by evidence suggesting the sudden occurrence of angiosperms – seed-producing flowering plants – in the mid-Cretaceous period. The evidence rather flew in the face of his theory of evolution, which implied that all organisms should increase gradually.

“'Natura non facit saltum,” he wrote. Nature does not make a leap.

"Earlier this year, as reported in Cosmos, a US-led team suggested the answer lies in the ability of these plants to downsize their genomes, giving them the infrastructure and energy to spread rapidly. (my bold)

"Now Chinese researchers have suggested it’s a question of timing of a rather different nature.

"Writing in the journal Scientific Reports, a group led by Wang Xin from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology describe a flower, Lijinganthus revoluta, found embedded in Burmese amber dating to 99 million years ago.

"The fossil is exquisite and complete and, most importantly, belongs to the Pentapetalae clade of core eudicots – a large and diverse assemblage of angiosperms found in a range of habitats.

"Together with contemporaneous flowers and fruits, the researchers say, Lijinganthus indicates that core eudicots flourished on Earth about 100 million years ago, although did not dominate vegetation until about 20 million years later, the mid-Cretaceous.

“'Various molecular clocks indicate that angiosperms and eudicots have a significantly earlier origin than the earliest fossil record indicates,” the authors write.

"In other words, they suggest, what Darwin thought was the origin of angiosperms was, in fact, a blooming that was millennia in the making."

Comment: Note my bold: downsizing DNA is devolution of DNA to advance plants. This research was noted in the previous entry here describing the genome shrinking in order to advance the flowering form.

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