Literature DB >> 20408751

Fur versus feathers: pollen delivery by bats and hummingbirds and consequences for pollen production.

Nathan Muchhala1, James D Thomson.   

Abstract

One floral characteristic associated with bat pollination (chiropterophily) is copious pollen production, a pattern we confirmed in a local comparison of hummingbird- and bat-adapted flowers from a cloud forest site in Ecuador. Previous authors have suggested that wasteful pollen transfer by bats accounted for the pattern. Here we propose and test a new hypothesis: bats select for increased pollen production because they can efficiently transfer larger amounts of pollen, which leads to a more linear male fitness gain curve for bat-pollinated plants. Flight cage experiments with artificial flowers and flowers of Aphelandra acanthus provide support for this hypothesis; in both instances, the amount of pollen delivered to stigmas by birds is not related to the amount of pollen removed from anthers on the previous visit, while the same function for bats increases linearly. Thus, increased pollen production will be linearly related to increased male reproductive success for bat flowers, while for bird flowers, increased pollen production leads to rapidly diminishing fitness returns. We speculate that fur takes up and holds more pollen than feathers, which seem to readily shed excess grains. Our gain-curve hypothesis may also explain why evolutionary shifts from bird to bat pollination seem more common than shifts in the opposite direction.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20408751     DOI: 10.1086/652473

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  8 in total

1.  Flowers up! The effect of floral height along the shoot axis on the fitness of bat-pollinated species.

Authors:  Ugo M Diniz; Arthur Domingos-Melo; Isabel Cristina Machado
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2019-11-15       Impact factor: 4.357

Review 2.  Plant-pollinator interactions along the pathway to paternity.

Authors:  Corneile Minnaar; Bruce Anderson; Marinus L de Jager; Jeffrey D Karron
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2019-01-23       Impact factor: 4.357

3.  Field evidence of strong differential pollen placement by Old World bat-pollinated plants.

Authors:  Alyssa B Stewart; Michele R Dudash
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2016-11-17       Impact factor: 4.357

4.  Differential pollen placement on an Old World nectar bat increases pollination efficiency.

Authors:  Alyssa B Stewart; Michele R Dudash
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2015-10-19       Impact factor: 4.357

Review 5.  Pollination intensity and paternity in flowering plants.

Authors:  Dorothy A Christopher; Randall J Mitchell; Jeffrey D Karron
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2020-01-08       Impact factor: 4.357

6.  Evidence for passerine bird pollination in Rhododendron species.

Authors:  Zhi-Huan Huang; Yun-Peng Song; Shuang-Quan Huang
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2017-11-09       Impact factor: 3.276

7.  Bromeliads going batty: pollinator partitioning among sympatric chiropterophilous Bromeliaceae.

Authors:  Pedro Adrián Aguilar-Rodríguez; Marco Tschapka; José G García-Franco; Thorsten Krömer; M Cristina MacSwiney G
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2019-03-12       Impact factor: 3.276

8.  Floral traits driving reproductive isolation of two co-flowering taxa that share vertebrate pollinators.

Authors:  Joel A Queiroz; Zelma G M Quirino; Isabel C Machado
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2015-11-10       Impact factor: 3.276

  8 in total

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