Weedy Adaptation in Setaria spp.: VI. S. faberi Seed hull shape as soil germination signal antenna
J.L. Donnelly, D.C. Adams, J. Dekker

TL;DR
This study investigates how seed hull shape in Setaria spp. reflects ecological adaptation for germination signals, showing that shape differences are driven by ecological roles rather than phylogenetic relationships.
Contribution
It demonstrates that seed shape variation is primarily influenced by ecological selection for weedy versus domesticated traits, surpassing phylogenetic constraints.
Findings
Seed shape differs significantly between weeds and crops.
Shape variation correlates with ecological role rather than phylogeny.
Three-dimensional models support shape adaptation for environmental exploitation.
Abstract
Ecological selection forces for weedy and domesticated traits have influenced the evolution of seed shape in Setaria resulting in similarity in seed shape that reflects similarity in ecological function rather than reflecting phylogenetic relatedness. Seeds from two diploid subspecies of Setaria viridis, consisting of one weedy subspecies and two races of the domesticated subspecies, and four other polyploidy weedy species of Setaria. We quantified seed shape from the silhouettes of the seeds in two separate views. Differences in shape were compared to ecological role (weed vs. crop) and the evolutionary trajectory of shape change by phylogenetic grouping from a single reference species was calculated. Idealized three-dimensional models were created to examine the differences in shape relative to surface area and volume. All populations were significantly different in shape, with crops…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Plant Taxonomy and Phylogenetics
