Sam Mugford
answered on 29 Mar 2023:
last edited 29 Mar 2023 8:36 pm
It seems that the science is not settled on this. There are two main ideas, it might be a genetic mutation, or it might be a response to the environment. If it was a mutation you would expect every leaf on the plant to have 4 leaflets (the 3 leaves of a clover are actually a single leaf made up of 3 – or occasionally 4- leaflets), but usually it is only found on a single leaf, while the others on the plant have 3 leaflets. So it seems more likely that something has gone wrong in the leaves that develop 4 leaflets, it might be stress from an injury or another environmental stress that causes the unusual development of a 4th leaflet.
But its also possible that it might be a genetic mutation, but one that is only present in part of the plant and not the other leaves. These are called somatic mutations.
Its a question that needs more experiments to get a full answer to. I can think of a few experiments that we could do to find out. For example we could sequence all the DNA from a 4-leaved clover and from the other 3-leaved leaves on the same plant and look for differences. Or we could expose clover plants to stress to see if it causes plants to grow extra leaflets.
Well, there is a specific specie of Oxalis that always produces 4 leaflets clover, it is called Oxalis deppei or Oxalis tetraphylla. The rest of Oxalis can produce 3 leaflets with some mutations as Sam cited to produce an additional one. Also, we need to discriminate between Oxalis, Trifolium, Medicago and Marsilea genus. All produce 3-4 leaflets (heart shapes, mostly) but they belong to different families.
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