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BOSTON -- When the florist hands you your Valentine's Day bouquet,
treat those
roses with respect. They represent a form of plant life that has
outlasted the dinosaurs and changed the face of the planet.
Roses and their relatives also
represent one of Earth's most enduring
evolutionary puzzles. Since the days of British naturalist Charles
Darwin, who looked at flowering plants and found "an abominable
mystery," scientists have struggled to answer basic questions: How old
are they? What led to their remarkable diversity (between 250,000 and
300,000 species today)? And how did they come to dominate plant life in
most places on the planet?
Researchers have been busy looking
for clues at both ends of the time line.
In what George Schatz of the
Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis
calls "spectacular finds," paleobotanists during the past decade have
uncovered fossils of flowers and flower parts dating back 120 million
years. These discoveries have "fueled a resurgence of research into the
origin of flowering plants."
Known collectively as angiosperms,
flowering plants blossomed in
diversity and geographic reach during the middle and end of the
Cretaceous period, between 146 million and 65 million years ago. The
new fossils have prompted some researchers to revise their views on the
ancient angiosperms that lie at the base of this expansive family tree.
Treasure
in the mud
Initially, fossils dating back
between 93 million and 95 million years
pointed to woody magnolia-like plants as the original angiosperms. But
during the mid- 1980s, researchers began to find charcoalized remains
of tiny herb-like angiosperms that date as far back as 120 million
years.
The fossils, which have been found
in mud deposits in Sweden, Portugal,
England, and and along the Eastern and Gulf coasts of the United
States, preserved flowers and flower parts in fine detail and represent
a gold mine of data for researchers.
"There's more material than we can
possibly work on," says Patrick
Herendeen, an assistant professor of biology at George Washington
University in Washington.
Their emergence has led
researchers such as James Reveal, a botany
professor at the University of Maryland at College Park, to look to
"the sneaky herbs among the feet of dinosaurs" as the root of today's
profusion of flowering plants.
The sneaky-herb theory holds that
true angiosperms were weed-like. The
majority of these early angiosperms resembled members of the pepper
family and dominated forest floors.
With their rapid reproduction
rates, the species quickly repopulated
and dominated land that had been ravaged by forest fires or other
environmental changes. As they spread, they developed their unique
"come hither" look as the plants competed for insect or other
pollinators.
Despite these insights, looking to
fossils for flowering-plant origins may have its limits.
"For a long time, there has been
an argument - and it still rages -
about pre-Cretaceous angiosperm fossils" and their credibility, Dr.
Reveal says.
The problem is that the two key
traits of angiosperms - their two-stage
fertilization process and the efficient way they convey food to their
roots - wouldn't be immediately obvious early in their history, when
their physical appearance would still resemble their coniferous
ancestors.
Thus, the task of dating has been
left to molecular biologists, who use
the slow rate of change in DNA molecules as "clocks" to estimate age.
Using this approach, your Valentine roses can trace their ultimate
roots back some 200 million years.
Today's
petals
While some researchers have been
looking at fossils, others are looking
for clues among today's petals. These efforts got a boost with the
rediscovery in Madagascar of a population of plants thought to have
changed little since their emergence at least 60 million years ago.
Genetic material from these plants
is expected to give molecular
biologists new tools to use for establishing the history of
angiosperms.
The population, first discovered
in 1909, appeared to go extinct. Dr.
Schatz reported its 1994 rediscovery in a recent issue of the journal
Nature.
The plant, known as Tahktajania
perrieri, "is a key discovery because
it looks to be the most basal member of one of the earliest families of
flowering plants," says Elizabeth Zimmer, a research botanist at the
Smithsonian Institution's Laboratory of Molecular Systematics.
Information about the plant's
genetic makeup is feeding into a larger
set of angiosperm genetic data being compiled by researchers at
Washington State University. This should allow researchers to compare
traits among flowering plants at the molecular level.
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