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Author(s):
Byron B. Lamont, Tianhua He
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire History

NRFSN number: 15050
Record updated:

Fire as a major evolutionary force has been disputed because it is considered to lack supporting evidence. If a trait has evolved in response to selection by fire then the environment of the plant must have been fire-prone before the appearance of that trait. Using outcomes of trait assignments applied to molecular phylogenies for fire-stimulated flowering, seed-release, and germination, in this Opinion article we show that fire-proneness precedes, or rarely coincides with, the evolution of these fire-adapted traits. In addition, fire remains central to understanding germination promoted by smoke among species occurring in non-fire-prone environments because of the historical association of their clade with fire. Fire-mimicking selection and associated exaptations have no place in understanding the evolution of fire-adapted traits because we find no support for any reversal in the fire–trait sequence through time.

Citation

Lamont, B.B. and T. He. 2016. Fire-proneness as a prerequisite for the evolution of fire-adapted traits. Trends in Plant Science. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tplants.2016.11.004

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