Literature DB >> 21642173

The pollination biology of Burmeistera (Campanulaceae): specialization and syndromes.

Nathan Muchhala1.   

Abstract

The floral traits of plants with specialized pollination systems both facilitate the primary pollinator and restrict other potential pollinators. To explore interactions between pollinators and floral traits of the genus Burmeistera, I filmed floral visitors and measured pollen deposition for 10 species in six cloud forest sites throughout northern Ecuador. Nine species were primarily bat-pollinated (84-100% of pollen transfer); another (B. rubrosepala) was exclusively hummingbird-pollinated. According to a principal components analysis of 11 floral measurements, flowers of B. rubrosepala were morphologically distinct. Floral traits of all species closely matched traditional ornithophilous and chiropterophilous pollination syndromes; flowers of B. rubrosepala were bright red, lacked odor, opened in the afternoon, and had narrow corolla apertures and flexible pedicels, which positioned them below the foliage. Flowers of the bat-pollinated species were dull-colored, emitted odor, opened in the evening, and had wide apertures and rigid pedicels, which positioned them beyond the foliage. Aperture width appeared most critical to restricting pollination; hummingbirds visited wide flowers without contacting the reproductive parts, and bats did not visit the narrow flowers of B. rubrosepala. Aperture width may impose an adaptive trade-off that favors the high degree of specialization in the genus. Other floral measurements were highly variable amongst bat-pollinated species, including stigma exsertion, calyx lobe morphology, and pedicel length. Because multiple species of Burmeistera often coexist, such morphological diversity may reduce pollen competition by encouraging pollinator fidelity and/or spatially partitioning pollinator's bodies.

Entities:  

Year:  2006        PMID: 21642173     DOI: 10.3732/ajb.93.8.1081

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bot        ISSN: 0002-9122            Impact factor:   3.844


  17 in total

1.  Character displacement among bat-pollinated flowers of the genus Burmeistera: analysis of mechanism, process and pattern.

Authors:  Nathan Muchhala; Matthew D Potts
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2007-11-07       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  A generalized pollination system in the tropics: bats, birds and Aphelandra acanthus.

Authors:  Nathan Muchhala; Angelica Caiza; Juan Carlos Vizuete; James D Thomson
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2009-01-08       Impact factor: 4.357

3.  Floral divergence, pollinator partitioning and the spatiotemporal pattern of plant-pollinator interactions in three sympatric Adenophora species.

Authors:  Chang-Qiu Liu; Shuang-Quan Huang
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2013-07-04       Impact factor: 3.225

4.  Pollination syndromes ignored: importance of non-ornithophilous flowers to Neotropical savanna hummingbirds.

Authors:  Pietro K Maruyama; Genilda M Oliveira; Carolina Ferreira; Bo Dalsgaard; Paulo E Oliveira
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2013-11-16

5.  First record of bat-pollination in the species-rich genus Tillandsia (Bromeliaceae).

Authors:  Pedro Adrián Aguilar-Rodríguez; M Cristina MacSwiney G; Thorsten Krömer; José G García-Franco; Anina Knauer; Michael Kessler
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2014-03-20       Impact factor: 4.357

6.  The relationships between floral traits and specificity of pollination systems in three Scandinavian plant communities.

Authors:  Amparo Lázaro; Stein Joar Hegland; Orjan Totland
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2008-05-28       Impact factor: 3.225

Review 7.  The evolution of bat pollination: a phylogenetic perspective.

Authors:  Theodore H Fleming; Cullen Geiselman; W John Kress
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2009-09-29       Impact factor: 4.357

8.  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

9.  Have giant lobelias evolved several times independently? Life form shifts and historical biogeography of the cosmopolitan and highly diverse subfamily Lobelioideae (Campanulaceae).

Authors:  Alexandre Antonelli
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2009-11-26       Impact factor: 7.431

10.  Effective pollinators of Asian sacred lotus (Nelumbo nucifera): contemporary pollinators may not reflect the historical pollination syndrome.

Authors:  Jiao-Kun Li; Shuang-Quan Huang
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2009-07-17       Impact factor: 4.357

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