Crawford,
D. J.,
E. Landolt, D. H. Les, and R.T. Kimball.
2005. Speciation in duckweeds (Lemnaceae): phylogenetic and ecological
inferences. Aliso 22:229-240.
Species
of duckweeds (Lemnaceae) that were resolved as sister taxa in a
phylogeny based on combined molecular and non-molecular data were
compared for morphological, physiological, and ecological attributes to
infer factors important in the initial divergence leading to
speciation. The ability to survive extreme conditions such as
desiccation and cold temperatures is the most common difference
identified between species. Two morphological characters facilitating
survival in extreme environments are production of special resting buds
called turions and increased
seed production. The prevalent geographic pattern for species pairs
consists of one restricted species occurring on the periphery of a more
widespread taxon; this pattern indicates that divergence of peripheral
isolates is a common geographical mode of speciation in duckweeds.
Other species differ in optimal environmental conditions for growth,
and these species are largely sympatric. In only one instance does it
appear that divergence and speciation occurred following long-distance
dispersal. Sympatric species pairs have the lowest molecular
divergence; widespread primarily allopatric, and distantly allopatric
species have the highest molecular divergence. Despite infrequent
sexual reproduction, some degree of detectable variation (molecular,
physiological, etc.) occurs within populations and among populations of
the same species. Molecular evidence indicates that variation within
duckweeds extends from the population and intraspecific levels to very
different levels of divergence among recognized species. Contrary to
the appearance of morphological and ecological uniformity implied by
their reduced morphology and restricted occurrence in fresh water
habitats, duckweeds are not a group in evolutionary stasis. Rather,
these smallest of all flowering plants are dynamic evolutionarily, and
comprise a model system for studying plant evolution and speciation.