The evolutionary success of angiosperms: a foundation of bioenergetic surplus.
Miguel AF.
Plant Hydraulics
Every fruit, vegetable, and flower in your garden belongs to a group of plants whose leaf veins are so energy-efficient that they generate spare capacity to keep working after being torn, chewed, or broken — a hidden resilience that gymnosperms like pines and ancient ferns simply cannot match.
Flowering plants — everything from oak trees to tomatoes to dandelions — have a special branching pattern in their leaf veins that moves water more efficiently than any other group of plants on Earth. That efficiency is so effective it frees up leftover energy, which the plant invests in extra backup veins. So when a bug chews a hole in a leaf or a hailstorm damages a branch, flowering plants can keep capturing sunlight and growing at full speed while their competitors slow down.
Key Findings
Angiosperm leaf vascular architecture outperforms both gymnosperms and ferns across every efficiency metric modeled, including water transport cost and distribution uniformity.
The efficiency advantage is driven by two measurable architectural properties: the branching exponent (how efficiently veins supply tissue) and the vein placement ratio (how evenly water is distributed across the leaf).
Superior efficiency generates a quantifiable bioenergetic surplus that is reinvested into a redundant, fault-tolerant vascular network — sustaining high photosynthetic rates even after physical damage that would cripple less efficient plant lineages.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Flowering plants dominate nearly every ecosystem on Earth, and a new mathematical model reveals why: their leaf vein networks move water so efficiently that the energy savings fund a built-in backup system, keeping photosynthesis running even after physical damage — an advantage no other major plant group possesses.
Abstract Preview
The global ecological dominance of angiosperms represents a major evolutionary success. This study suggests that their ascendance is not due to a single trait but to a deeply integrated hydraulic d...
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Flowering plants are plants that bear flowers and fruits, and form the clade Angiospermae. The term angiosperm is derived from the Greek words ἀγγεῖον and σπέρμα, meaning that the seeds are enclosed within a fruit. The group was formerly called Magnoliophyta.