Here we explore these questions in relation to flower colour. Flower colour sits at the intersection of ecological interactions, genetics, and evolution and thus provides an excellent system to understand the causes of variation and, more importantly, what maintains or erodes it. Flower color is the result of pigment molecules accumulating in cells, but it's not as simple as just making pigment.
The location, type of pigment, and amount produced, are all very important. These aspects are genetically controlled. Two main groups of genes control flower color.
One group includes genes that code for the protein machinery required to make pigment molecules. The other group. Next, we describe the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway that determines flower color, and we review pertinent work on the molecular genetics of the genes that encode enzymes within this pathway.
Finally, we consider progress in the analysis of selection on flower color variation in natural and experimental populations of the common morning glory. Introduction to Flower Color Variation Flower color variation is a complex trait influenced by multiple factors including genetics, environmental conditions, and biochemical pathways. The colors we observe are primarily due to pigments within the petals that absorb and reflect specific wavelengths of light.
These colors serve various ecological functions, such as attracting pollinators or. References "Flower color variation: A model for the experimental study of evolution," Michael T. Clegg and Mary L.
Durbin, Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA "Evolutionary Transitions in Floral Color," Mark D. Rausher, Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, N.C. However, most of our current understanding of flower color evolution arises from variation between discrete color morphs and completed color shifts accompanying pollinator shifts, while evidence for pollinator.
To elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying flower color variation in I. uliginosa, we conducted comprehensive transcriptome sequencing and focused functional analysis of the IuMYB1 gene. Transcriptomic profiling revealed 96 MYB homologs and 81 MYB-related sequences, predominantly belonging to the R2R3.
Natural selection acts on phenotypic trait variation. Understanding the mechanisms that create and maintain trait variation is fundamental to understanding the breadth of diversity seen on Earth. Flower colour is among the most conspicuous and highly diverse traits in nature.
Most flowering plant populations have uniform floral colours, but a minority exhibit within. Previous studies examining the tempo of flower color evolution have largely focused on continuous variation, such as changes in hue and brightness across species. Pigmentation in flower petals mainly relies on anthocyanins and carotenoids, two classes of pigments whose biosynthetic and regulatory pathways are well characterized (1) and constitute theoretically ideal targets for evolution to create new color patterns.
However, evolution of flower color sometimes works in mysterious ways.