Floral traits and their connection with pollinators and climate.

IF 3.6 2区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES Annals of botany Pub Date : 2025-02-08 DOI:10.1093/aob/mcae046
Shweta Basnett, Julia Krpan, Anahí Espíndola
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Abstract

Background and aims: Floral characteristics vary significantly among plant species, and multiple underlying factors govern this diversity. Although it is widely known that spatial variation in pollinator groups can exert selection on floral traits, the relative contribution of pollinators and climate to the variation of floral traits across large geographical areas remains a little-studied area. Besides furthering our conceptual understanding of these processes, gaining insight into the topic is also of conservation relevance: understanding how climate might drive variation in floral traits can serve to protect plant-pollinator interactions in globally change conditions.

Methods: We used Rhododendron as a model system and collected floral traits (corolla length, nectar volume and concentrations), floral visitors and climatic data on 21 Rhododendron species across two continents (North America, Appalachians and Asia, Himalaya). Based on this, we quantified the influence of climate and pollinators on floral traits using phylogeny-informed analyses.

Key results: Our results indicate that there is substantial variation in pollinators and morphological traits across Rhododendron species and continents. We came across four pollinator groups: birds, bees, butterflies and flies. Asian species were commonly visited by birds, bees and flies, whereas bees and butterflies were the most common visitors of North American species. The visitor identity explained nectar trait variation, with flowers visited by birds presenting higher volumes of dilute nectar and those visited by insects producing concentrated nectar. Nectar concentration and corolla length exhibited a strong phylogenetic signal across the analysed set of species. We also found that nectar trait variation in the Himalayas could also be explained by climate, which presented significant interactions with pollinator identity.

Conclusions: Our results indicate that both pollinators and climate contribute and interact to drive nectar trait variation, suggesting that both can affect pollination interactions and floral (and plant) evolution individually and in interaction with each other.

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花卉特征及其与传粉昆虫和气候的关系。
背景和目的:植物物种之间的花卉特征差异很大,这种多样性受多种潜在因素的影响。尽管人们普遍知道授粉者群体的空间差异会对花卉特征产生选择作用,但授粉者和气候对大地理区域花卉特征差异的相对贡献仍然是一个鲜有研究的领域。除了加深我们对这些过程的概念性理解外,深入了解这一主题还具有保护意义:了解气候如何推动花卉性状的变化,有助于在全球变化条件下保护植物与授粉者之间的相互作用:我们以杜鹃花为模型系统,收集了两大洲(北美-阿巴拉契亚山脉和亚洲-喜马拉雅山脉)21 种杜鹃花的花性状(花冠长度、花蜜量和浓度)、花访客和气候数据。在此基础上,我们利用系统发育信息分析量化了气候和传粉昆虫对花卉特征的影响:主要结果:我们的研究结果表明,在杜鹃花物种和各大洲之间,传粉媒介和形态特征存在很大差异。我们发现了四个授粉者群体:鸟类、蜜蜂、蝴蝶和苍蝇。鸟类、蜜蜂和苍蝇是亚洲杜鹃花常见的传粉媒介,而蜜蜂和蝴蝶则是北美杜鹃花最常见的传粉媒介。访客身份解释了花蜜性状的差异,鸟类访问的花呈现较高的稀释花蜜量,而昆虫访问的花则产生浓缩花蜜。花蜜浓度和花冠长度在所分析的物种集中显示出强烈的系统发育信号。我们还发现,喜马拉雅地区的花蜜性状变异也可以用气候来解释,气候与授粉者身份之间存在显著的相互作用:我们的研究结果表明,授粉昆虫和气候在推动花蜜性状变异方面既有贡献也有相互作用,这表明二者可单独或相互影响授粉相互作用和花(及植物)进化。
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来源期刊
Annals of botany
Annals of botany 生物-植物科学
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
4.80%
发文量
138
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Annals of Botany is an international plant science journal publishing novel and rigorous research in all areas of plant science. It is published monthly in both electronic and printed forms with at least two extra issues each year that focus on a particular theme in plant biology. The Journal is managed by the Annals of Botany Company, a not-for-profit educational charity established to promote plant science worldwide. The Journal publishes original research papers, invited and submitted review articles, ''Research in Context'' expanding on original work, ''Botanical Briefings'' as short overviews of important topics, and ''Viewpoints'' giving opinions. All papers in each issue are summarized briefly in Content Snapshots , there are topical news items in the Plant Cuttings section and Book Reviews . A rigorous review process ensures that readers are exposed to genuine and novel advances across a wide spectrum of botanical knowledge. All papers aim to advance knowledge and make a difference to our understanding of plant science.
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