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Creators/Authors contains: "Mayrose, Itay"

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  1. Premise of research. Polyploidy, a major evolutionary process in flowering plants, is expected to 19 impact floral traits which can have cascading effects on pollination interactions, but this may 20 depend on selfing propensity. In a novel use of herbarium specimens, we assessed the effects of 21 polyploidy and mating system on floral traits and the pollination niche of 40 Brassicaceae 22 species. 23 Methodology. We combined data on mating system (self-compatible or self-incompatible) with 24 inferred ploidy level (polyploid or diploid) and use phylogenetically controlled analyses to 25 investigate their influence on floral traits (size and shape) and the degree of pollination 26 generalism based on the frequency and the richness of heterospecific pollen morphospecies 27 captured by stigmas. 28 Pivotal Results. Flower size (but not shape) depended on the interaction between ploidy and 29 mating system. Self-incompatible polyploid species had larger flowers than self-incompatible 30 diploids but there was no difference for self-compatible species. The breadth of pollination niche 31 (degree of generalism) was not affected by ploidy but rather strongly by mating system only. 32 Self-incompatible species had more stigmas with heterospecific pollen and higher heterospecific 33 pollen morphospecies richness per stigma than self-compatible species, regardless of their 34 ploidy. 35 Conclusions. Our results demonstrate that mating system moderated the influence of ploidy on 36 morphological features associated with pollination generalism but that response in terms of 37 heterospecific pollen captured as a proxy of pollination generalism was more variable. 
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  2. Summary If particular traits consistently affect rates of speciation and extinction, broad macroevolutionary patterns can be interpreted as consequences of selection at high levels of the biological hierarchy. Identifying traits associated with diversification rates is difficult because of the wide variety of characters under consideration and the statistical challenges of testing for associations from comparative phylogenetic data. Ploidy (diploid vs polyploid states) and breeding system (self‐incompatible vs self‐compatible states) are both thought to be drivers of differential diversification in angiosperms.We fit 29 diversification models to extensive trait and phylogenetic data in Solanaceae and investigate how speciation and extinction rate differences are associated with ploidy, breeding system, and the interaction between these traits.We show that diversification patterns in Solanaceae are better explained by breeding system and an additional unobserved factor, rather than by ploidy. We also find that the most common evolutionary pathway to polyploidy in Solanaceae occurs via direct breakdown of self‐incompatibility by whole genome duplication, rather than indirectly via breakdown followed by polyploidization.Comparing multiple stochastic diversification models that include complex trait interactions alongside hidden states enhances our understanding of the macroevolutionary patterns in plant phylogenies. 
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