List of C4 plants

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A farmer among high maize plants
Maize (Zea mays, Poaceae) is the most widely cultivated C4 plant.[1]

C4 plants use the C4 carbon fixation pathway to increase their photosynthetic efficiency by reducing or suppressing photorespiration, which mainly occurs under low atmospheric CO
2
concentration, high light, high temperature, drought, and salinity.[2][3] There are roughly 8,100 known C4 species, which belong to at least 61 distinct evolutionary lineages in 19 families (as per APG IV classification[4]) of flowering plants.[1] Among these are important crops such as maize, sorghum and sugarcane, but also weeds and invasive plants.[1] Although only 3% of flowering plant species use C4 carbon fixation, they account for 23% of global primary production.[5] The repeated, convergent C4 evolution from C3 ancestors has spurred hopes to bio-engineer the C4 pathway into C3 crops such as rice.[1][5]

C4 photosynthesis probably first evolved 30–35 million years ago in the Oligocene, and further origins occurred since, most of them in the last 15 million years. C4 plants are mainly found in tropical and warm-temperate regions, predominantly in open grasslands where they are often dominant. While most are graminoids, other growth forms such as forbs, vines, shrubs, and even some trees and aquatic plants are also known among C4 plants.[1]

C4 plants are usually identified by their higher 13C/12C isotopic ratio compared to C3 plants or their typical leaf anatomy.[5] The distribution of C4 lineages among plants has been determined through phylogenetics and was considered well known as of 2016. Monocots – mainly grasses (Poaceae) and sedges (Cyperaceae) – account for around 80% of C4 species, but they are also found in the eudicots.[1]

The following list presents known C4 lineages by family, based on the overview by Sage (2016).[1] They correspond to single species or clades thought to have acquired the C4 pathway independently. In some lineages that also include C3 and C3–C4 intermediate species, the C4 pathway may have evolved more than once.[1]

Spiny plant with pale violet flowers
(Acanthaceae) grows in deserts.
Dense bush with yellow flowers in dry habitat
Shadscale (Atriplex confertifolia, Amaranthaceae) is a halophytic shrub common in steppes of western North America.[1]
Bush in very dry desert habitat
Black saxaul (Haloxylon ammodendron, Amaranthaceae) provided fuel for caravans following the Silk Road in Central Asia.[1]
Plant with inflorescence of white flowers
Cleome gynandra (Cleomaceae) has been a C4 model plant.[1]
Dense papyrus stand on river bank
Papyrus (Cyperus papyrus, Cyperaceae) has been of major cultural importance.[1]
Prostrate purple plants growing on sidewalk
Spotted spurge (Euphorbia maculata, Euphorbiaceae) commonly grows in sidewalk cracks in North America.[6]
Bright green foliage of aquatic plant
The aquatic Egeria densa (Hydrocharitaceae) uses the C4 pathway under high temperature and light intensity.
Cut sugarcane
Sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum, Poaceae) is grown for sugar and bioethanol.[1]
Prostrate plant with shiny, fleshy leaves
Purslane (Portulaca oleracea, Portulacaceae), a weed and ancient vegetable, uses both C4 and CAM photosynthesis.[1][7]
Grass with inflorescence in front of blue sky
Rhodes grass (Chloris gayana, Poaceae) is a major forage grass in tropical areas.[1]
Spiny fruits devloping on plant
The spiny fruits of puncture vine (Tribulus terrestris, Zygophyllaceae) may even puncture tyres.[1]

Acanthaceae[]

The large acanthus family Acanthaceae includes one genus with C4 species, found in dry habitats from Africa to Asia.[8]

Aizoaceae[]

While many species in the ice plant family Aizoaceae use crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), one subfamily with drought-tolerant and halophytic plants includes C4 species:[9]

  • Sesuvioideae – 30 C4 species, 1–6 origins

Amaranthaceae[]

The amaranth family Amaranthaceae (including the former goosefoot family Chenopodiaceae) contains around 800 known C4 species, which belong to 14 distinct lineages in seven subfamilies. This makes Amaranthaceae the family with most C4 species and lineages among the eudicots.[1] Suaeda aralocaspica and species of the genus Bienertia use a particular, single-cell type of C4 carbon fixation.[1][10]

  • Aerva (Amaranthoideae) – 4 C4 species[11]
  • Alternanthera (Gomphrenoideae) – 17 C4 species (also includes C3–C4 intermediates)[11]
  • Amaranthus (Amaranthoideae) – 90 C4 species[11]
  • Atriplex (Chenopodioideae) – around 180 C4 species[12]
  • BassiaCamphorosma clade (Camphorosmoideae) – 24 C4 species (also includes one C3–C4 intermediate), 1–2 origins[13]
  • Bienertia (Suaedoideae) – 3 C4 species[10][14]
  • Caroxyleae (syn. Caroxyloneae, Salsoloideae) – 157 C4 species[15][16]
  • Gomphrenoids (Gomphrenoideae) – 138 C4 species[11]
  • Salsoleae (Salsoloideae) – 158 C4 species, 2–4 origins[15][16]
  • Suaeda aralocaspica (Suaedoideae)[10]
  • Suaeda sect. Salsina – 30 C4 species[10]
  • Suaeda sect. Schoberia – 9 C4 species[10]
  • Tecticornia – (Salicornioideae) 2 C4 species[17]
  • Tidestromia (Gomphrenoideae) – 8 C4 species[11]

Asteraceae[]

The composite family Asteraceae contains three C4 lineages, in two different tribes of subfamily Asteroideae.[1][18] They include the model genus Flaveria with closely related C3, C4, and intermediate species.[1]

Boraginaceae[]

The borage family Boraginaceae contains one widespread C4 genus, Euploca, which has also been treated as part of a distinct family Heliotropiaceae.[22]

  • Euploca (also includes C3–C4 intermediates[23]) – 130 C4 species, 1–3 origins[1]

Cleomaceae[]

The Cleomaceae, formerly included in the caper family Capparaceae, contains three C4 species in genus Cleome. These three species independently acquired the C4 pathway; the genus also contains numerous C3 as well as C3–C4 intermediate species.[1][24][25]

Caryophyllaceae[]

In the carnation family Caryophyllaceae, the C4 pathway evolved once, in a clade within the polyphyletic genus Polycarpaea.[1][26]

Cyperaceae[]

The sedge family Cyperaceae is second only to the grasses in number of C4 species. Prominent C4 sedges include culturally important species such as papyrus (Cyperus papyrus) and chufa (C. esculentus) but also purple nutsedge (C. rotundus), one of the world's major weeds. Eleocharis vivipara uses C3 carbon fixation in underwater leaves and C4 carbon fixation in aerial leaves.[1]

Euphorbiaceae[]

The spurge family Euphorbiaceae contains the largest single C4 lineage among eudicots. The C4 spurges are diverse and widespread; they range from weedy herbs to the only known C4 trees – four species from Hawaii, including (up to 10 m) and E. herbstii (up to 8 m).[1][6]

Gisekiaceae[]

Contains a C4 genus with a single species.

Hydrocharitaceae[]

Includes the only known aquatic C4 plants.[1]

Molluginaceae[]

The two C4 species within the same genus have acquired the pathway independently.

  • Mollugo – 2 C4 species, 2 origins

Nyctaginaceae[]

  • Allionia – 2 C4 species
  • Boerhavia – 42 C4 species

Polygonaceae[]

Portulacaceae[]

The single genus of this family forms one C4 lineage. CAM photosynthesis is also known. Common purslane (Portulaca oleracea) is a major weed but also a vegetable.[1]

Poaceae[]

The grass family includes most of the known C4 species – around 5000. They are only found in subfamilies of the PACMAD clade. Major C4 crops such as maize, sugarcane, sorghum and pearl millet belong in this family. The only known species with C3, C4 and intermediate variants, Alloteropsis semialata, is a grass.[1]

Scrophulariaceae[]

Zygophyllaceae[]

References[]

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