我要吃瓜

Article

Floral scent changes in response to pollen removal are rare in buzz-pollinated Solanum

Details

Citation

Moore CD, Farman DI, S?rkinen T, Stevenson PC & Vallejo-Marín M (2024) Floral scent changes in response to pollen removal are rare in buzz-pollinated Solanum. Planta, 260 (1), Art. No.: 15. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00425-024-04403-4

Abstract
Main conclusion One of seven Solanum taxa studied displayed associations between pollen presence and floral scent composition and volume, suggesting buzz-pollinated plants rarely use scent as an honest cue for foraging pollinators. Abstract Floral scent influences the recruitment, learning, and behaviour of floral visitors. Variation in floral scent can provide information on the amount of reward available or whether a flower has been visited recently and may be particularly important in species with visually concealed rewards. In many buzz-pollinated flowers, tubular anthers opening via small apical pores (poricidal anthers) visually conceal pollen and appear similar regardless of pollen quantity within the anther. We investigated whether pollen removal changes floral scent composition and emission rate in seven taxa of buzz-pollinated Solanum (Solanaceae). We found that pollen removal reduced both the overall emission of floral scent and the emission of specific compounds (linalool and farnesol) in S. lumholtzianum. Our findings suggest that in six out of seven buzz-pollinated taxa studied here, floral scent could not be used as a signal by visitors as it does not contain information on pollen availability.

Keywords
Chemical ecology; Concealed reward; Floral scent; Linalool; Plant-pollinator signalling; Plant ecology; Pollination; Poricidal flower; Volatile organic compound

Journal
Planta: Volume 260, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/07/2024
Publication date online03/06/2024
Date accepted by journal30/03/2024
URL
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN0032-0935
eISSN1432-2048
Data Location URL

Files (1)