Authors
Margaret Evans, Xavier Aubriot, David Hearn, Maxime Lanciaux, Sebastien Lavergne, Corinne Cruaud, Porter P Lowry, Thomas Haevermans
Publication date
2014/9/1
Journal
Systematic Biology
Volume
63
Issue
5
Pages
697-711
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Patterns of adaptation in response to environmental variation are central to our understanding of biodiversity, but predictions of how and when broad-scale environmental conditions such as climate affect organismal form and function remain incomplete. Succulent plants have evolved in response to arid conditions repeatedly, with various plant organs such as leaves, stems, and roots physically modified to increase water storage. Here, we investigate the role played by climate conditions in shaping the evolution of succulent forms in a plant clade endemic to Madagascar and the surrounding islands, part of the hyper-diverse genus Euphorbia (Euphorbiaceae). We used multivariate ordination of 19 climate variables to identify links between particular climate variables and three major forms of succulence—succulent leaves, cactiform stem succulence, and tubers. We then tested the relationship between climatic …
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