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Creators/Authors contains: "Maloof, Julin_N"

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  1. Flowers are a key reproductive innovation of the angiosperms. Seed plant reproductive axes (including flowers) evolved as reproductively specialized shoots of the land plant diploid sporophyte, with the gamete-producing haploid gametophyte becoming reduced and enclosed within ovules and microsporangia. The transcription factor LEAFY (LFY) initiates floral development, yet it predates flowers and is found across all land plants. LFY function outside angiosperms is known from the moss Physcomitrium patens, where it controls the first cell division of the sporophyte, and from the model fern Ceratopteris richardii, a seedless vascular plant where CrLFY1 and CrLFY2 maintain vegetative meristem activity. However, how LFY’s floral role evolved remains unclear. Using over-expression, we uncover new roles for CrLFY1/2 in fern gametophyte reproduction, in sperm cells and in the gametophyte's multicellular notch meristem. While no sporophytic reproductive function was detected in terms of time to sporing, over-expression supports a role in frond compounding and in the zygote's first cell division. Our findings suggest a potentially ancestral LFY function in fern haploid-stage reproduction, which might have been co-opted into the sporophyte during the origin of the flower. 
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  2. Abstract The seasonal timing of life history transitions is often critical to fitness, and many organisms rely upon environmental cues to match life cycle events with favorable conditions. In plants, the timing of seed germination is mediated by seasonal cues such as rainfall and temperature. Variation in cue responses among species can reflect evolutionary processes and adaptation to local climate and can affect vulnerability to changing conditions. Indeed, climate change is altering the timing of precipitation, and germination responses to such change can have consequences for individual fitness, population dynamics, and species distributions. Here, we assessed responses to the seasonal timing of germination‐triggering rains for eleven species spanning theStreptanthus/Caulanthusclade (Brassicaceae). To do so, we experimentally manipulated the onset date of rainfall events, measured effects on germination fraction, and evaluated whether responses were constrained by evolutionary relationships across the phylogeny. We then explored the possible consequences of these responses to contemporary shifts in precipitation timing. Germination fractions decreased with later onset of rains and cooler temperatures for all but threeCaulanthusspecies. Species' germination responses to the timing of rainfall and seasonal temperatures were phylogenetically constrained, withCaulanthusspecies appearing less responsive. Further, four species are likely already experiencing significant decreases in germination fractions with observed climate change, which has shifted the timing of rainfall towards the cooler, winter months in California. Overall, our findings emphasize the sensitivity of germination to seasonal conditions, underscore the importance of interacting environmental cues, and highlight vulnerability to shifting precipitation patterns with climate change, particularly in more northern, mesic species. 
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