• Title of article

    Leaf Evolution: Gases, Genes and Geochemistry

  • Author/Authors

    BEERLING، DAVID J. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    -344
  • From page
    345
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Aims This Botanical Briefing reviews how the integration of palaeontology, geochemistry and developmental biology is providing a new mechanistic framework for interpreting the 40- to 50-million-year gap between the origination of vascular land plants and the advent of large (megaphyll) leaves, a long-standing puzzle in evolutionary biology. Scope Molecular genetics indicates that the developmental mechanisms required for leaf production in vascular plants were recruited long before the advent of large megaphylls. According to theory, this morphogenetic potential was only realized as the concentration of atmospheric CO2 declined during the late Palaeozoic. Surprisingly, plants effectively policed their own evolution since the decrease in CO2 was brought about as terrestrial floras evolved accelerating the rate of silicate rock weathering and enhancing sedimentary organic carbon burial, both of which are long-term sinks for CO2. Conclusions The recognition that plant evolution responds to and influences CO2 over millions of years reveals the existence of an intricate web of vegetation feedbacks regulating the long-term carbon cycle. Several of these feedbacks destabilized CO2 and climate during the late Palaeozoic but appear to have quickened the pace of terrestrial plant and animal evolution at that time.
  • Keywords
    GEOCHEMISTRY , stomata , leaves , carbon cycle , genetics , fossil plants , feedbacks
  • Journal title
    Annals of Botany
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Annals of Botany
  • Record number

    118581