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All flowers come from this 140 million-year-old bloom, scientists have discovered

The findings represent a breakthrough in research into the origins and evolution of flowering plants.

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A 140 million-year-old bloom bearing a striking resemblance to a water lily was the mother (and father) of every flowering plant living today, scientists believe.

No fossils of the flower have been found, but scientists inferred what it must have looked like after analysing a mass of botanical data.

The first angiosperm, or flowering plant, had a simple arrangement of layered petals and contained both male and female reproductive organs, according to the study.

Reconstruction of the “first flower” showing both male stamens and female carpels, and multiple whorls of petal-like structures (Hervé Sauquet & Jürg Schönenberger)

Their appearance had a dramatic effect on ecosystems and the climate and drove the rapid evolution of pollinating insects. Today, angiosperms represent 90% of all land plants and are vital to the survival of terrestrial life.

However, few fossils of the earliest flowers exist and their origins are still poorly understood.

For the new study, scientists led by Dr Herve Sauquet, from the University of Paris-Sud in France, combined models of flower evolution with information from a huge database of present-day floral traits.

Snowdrops in early bloom at Rococo Gardens in Painswick, Gloucestershire (Tim Ireland/PA)

In outward appearance, the ancient flower looks similar to a water lily. Its key feature is multiple whorls of petal-like structures arranged in sets of three.

Within the flower head were (male) stamens that shed pollen towards the centre and a spiral of raised (female) carpels. The male and female organs were separated from one another.

The researchers wrote: “In spite of similarities with some extant (present day) flowers, there is no living species that shares this exact combination of characters.”

All living flowers ultimately derive from a single ancestor that lived about 140 million years ago (Hervé Sauquet & Jürg Schönenberger)

The team concluded: “The origin of the angiosperm flower remains among the most difficult and most important unresolved topics in evolutionary biology.

“These results are a major step forward for understanding the origin of floral diversity and evolution in angiosperms as a whole.”

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