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Specialized herbivory in fossil leaves reveals convergent origins of nyctinasty.

Authors :
Feng, Zhuo
Sui, Qun
Yang, Ji-Yuan
Guo, Yun
McLoughlin, Stephen
Source :
Current Biology. Feb2023, Vol. 33 Issue 4, p720-720. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Plants can move in various complex ways in response to external stimuli. 1,2 These mechanisms include responses to environmental triggers, such as tropic responses to light or gravity and nastic responses to humidity or contact. 3 Nyctinasty, the movements involving circadian rhythmic folding at night and opening at daytime of plant leaves or leaflets, has attracted the attention of scientists and the public for centuries. 4,5 In his canonical work entitled The Power of Movement in Plants , Charles Darwin carried out pioneering observations to document the diverse range of movements in plants. 6 His systematic examination of plants showing "sleep [folding] movements of leaves" led him to conclude that the legume family (Fabaceae) includes many more nyctinastic species than all other families combined. 3 Darwin also found that a specialized motor organ, the pulvinus, is responsible for most sleep movements of plant leaves, although differential cell division and the hydrolysis of glycosides and phyllanthurinolactone also facilitate nyctinasty in some plants. 7,8 However, the origin, evolutionary history, and functional benefits of foliar sleep movements remain ambiguous owing to the lack of fossil evidence for this process. Here, we document the first fossil evidence of foliar nyctinasty based on a symmetrical style of insect feeding damage (Folifenestra symmetrica isp. nov.) in gigantopterid seed-plant leaves from the upper Permian (∼259–252 Ma) of China. The pattern of insect damage indicates that the host leaves were attacked when mature but folded. Our finding reveals that foliar nyctinasty extends back to the late Paleozoic and evolved independently among various plant lineages. [Display omitted] • Foliar nyctinasty is reported based on insect feeding damage in Permian leaves • The insect-damaged leaves belong to two species of gigantopterid seed plants • Foliar nyctinasty probably evolved independently among various plant lineages Feng et al. describe a symmetrical style of insect feeding damage in gigantopterid leaves from the upper Permian of Southwest China and demonstrate that these leaves were attacked when mature but folded. This is the first evidence of foliar nyctinasty in fossil plants, revealing that foliar nyctinasty evolved independently among diverse plant groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609822
Volume :
33
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Current Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162027104
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.12.043