Publication:
Energetics and the evolution of carnivorous plants - Darwin's "most wonderful plants in the world"

Thumbnail Image

Date

2009

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Ellison, Aaron M. and Nicholas J. Gotelli. Energetics and the Evolution of Carnivorous Plants - Darwin's "Most Wonderful Plants in the World." Journal of Experimental Botany 60(1): 19-42.

Research Data

Abstract

Carnivory has evolved independently at least six times in five angiosperm orders. In spite of these independent origins, there is a remarkable morphological convergence of carnivorous plant traps and physiological convergence of mechanisms for digesting and assimilating prey. These convergent traits have made carnivorous plants model systems for addressing questions in plant molecular genetics, physiology, and evolutionary ecology. New data show that carnivorous plant genera with morphologically complex traps have higher relative rates of gene substitutions than do those with simple sticky traps. This observation suggests two alternative mechanisms for the evolution and diversification of carnivorous plant lineages. The “energetics hypothesis” posits rapid morphological evolution resulting from a few changes in regulatory genes responsible for meeting the high energetic demands of active traps. The “predictable prey capture hypothesis” further posits that complex traps yield more predictable and frequent prey captures. To evaluate these hypotheses, available data on the tempo and mode of carnivorous plant evolution were reviewed; patterns of prey capture by carnivorous plants were analyzed; and the energetic costs and benefits of botanical carnivory were reevaluated. Collectively, the data are more supportive of the energetics hypothesis than the predictable prey capture hypothesis. The energetics hypothesis is consistent with a phenomenological cost-benefit model for the evolution of botanical carnivory and also accounts for data suggesting that carnivorous plants have leaf construction costs and scaling relationships among leaf traits that are substantially different from non-carnivorous plants.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

carnivorous plants, niche overlap, competition, Darwin, energetics, universal spectrum of leaf traits, phylogeny, construction costs, prey capture, cost-benefit model

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories

Story
Energetics and the evolution of carnivorous… : DASH Story 2014-02-16
I'm writing a research review on the topic for my Capstone class in order to graduate from The College of New Jersey with a BS in Biology. Access to this article is extremely helpful for me to quickly find and learn as much information as needed for a very intensive project.
Story
Energetics and the evolution of carnivorous… : DASH Story 2015-11-21
I'm about to write my Master thesis about carnivorous plants in Germany. Therefore, I was searching for literature about nutrient gain and costs of traps. The ability to get free access to the papers of Harvard is very helpful, thanks a lot.