C4 photosynthesis has independently evolved from the ancestral C3
pathway in at least 60 plant lineages, but, as with other complex traits, how
it evolved is unclear. Here we show that the polyphyletic appearance of C4
photosynthesis is associated with diverse and flexible evolutionary paths that
group into four major trajectories. We conducted a meta-analysis of 18 lineages
containing species that use C3, C4, or intermediate C3-C4 forms of
photosynthesis to parameterise a 16-dimensional phenotypic landscape. We then
developed and experimentally verified a novel Bayesian approach based on a
hidden Markov model that predicts how the C4 phenotype evolved. The
alternative evolutionary histories underlying the appearance of C4
photosynthesis were determined by ancestral lineage and initial phenotypic
alterations unrelated to photosynthesis. We conclude that the order of C4
trait acquisition is flexible and driven by non-photosynthetic drivers. This
flexibility will have facilitated the convergent evolution of this complex
trait