Floral morphology is associated with pollen deposition patterns on moth bodies

IF 1.6 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Austral Ecology Pub Date : 2024-11-10 DOI:10.1111/aec.70006
Max N. Buxton, Anne C. Gaskett, Janice M. Lord, David E. Pattemore
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Floral syndromes can be a useful tool for predicting the identity of pollinators from floral morphology. However, the reliability of floral syndromes are still debated in the literature, and can often result in effective pollinators being overlooked. Pollination by moths has historically been associated with a floral syndrome comprising white tubular flowers that are heavily scented at night, but there have been few experimental tests of this association. To test whether moths preferentially land on flowers that are white and tubular, we allowed two moth species (Agrotis ipsilon (Hufnaggel, 1766) and Ichneutica mutans (Walker, 1857)) to choose freely between three plant species (Vaccinium corymbosum, Ericaceae, Pittosporum tenuifolium, Pittosporaceae, and two forms of Leptospermum scoparium, Myrtaceae) which represent four different floral morphologies. Anthers on the flowers were marked with fluorescent powder dye (pollen-tracker), with the presence of pollen-tracker on moth bodies after the experiment indicating floral visitation. We detected no floral preferences for any of the plant species by either moth species, suggesting moths will visit flowers that lack features associated with the syndrome even when in the presence of white, tubular flowers which might be predicted to be more attractive to moths. We also examined moth bodies to determine where pollen-tracker was carried most often and if this varied among the floral types. Our results indicate that some moth body parts may be more important than others for pollen transfer, depending on the morphology of the flowers visited. After visiting tubular flowers (Vaccinium and Pittosporum), pollen-tracker was most often located on the proboscis, but after visiting open-access flowers (Leptospermum) pollen-tracker was most often located on the legs. Future studies looking at the presence of pollen on moth bodies should consider this and ensure the entire moth body is examined for the presence of pollen.

花朵形态与蛾体花粉沉积模式有关
根据花的形态特征来预测传粉媒介的身份,花的综合特征是一种有用的工具。然而,花朵综合征的可靠性在文献中仍有争议,而且往往会导致有效的传粉媒介被忽视。飞蛾授粉历来与夜间散发浓郁香味的白色管状花组成的花综合征有关,但很少有实验测试这种关联。为了测试飞蛾是否偏爱白色管状花,我们让两种飞蛾(Agrotis ipsilon(Hufnaggel,1766 年)和 Ichneutica mutans(Walker,1857 年))在代表四种不同花朵形态的三种植物(越橘科 Vaccinium corymbosum、海桐科 Pittosporum tenuifolium 和桃金娘科 Leptospermum scoparium 的两种形态)之间自由选择。花上的花药用荧光粉末染料(花粉追踪器)标记,实验结束后,蛾体上出现花粉追踪器,表明有飞蛾来访花丛。我们没有发现蛾类对任何一种植物的花朵有偏好,这表明蛾类即使在白色管状花的情况下,也会光顾缺乏与综合症相关特征的花朵,而白色管状花可能对蛾类更有吸引力。我们还对蛾体进行了检查,以确定花粉追踪器最常被携带的位置,以及不同类型的花是否存在差异。我们的结果表明,飞蛾身体的某些部位对于花粉转移可能比其他部位更重要,这取决于所访问花朵的形态。飞蛾在采到管状花(越橘和海桐)后,花粉追踪器最常位于长鼻上,但在采到开放式花(绣线菊)后,花粉追踪器最常位于腿上。今后研究蛾体上是否存在花粉时应考虑到这一点,并确保检查整个蛾体是否存在花粉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Austral Ecology
Austral Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
117
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Austral Ecology is the premier journal for basic and applied ecology in the Southern Hemisphere. As the official Journal of The Ecological Society of Australia (ESA), Austral Ecology addresses the commonality between ecosystems in Australia and many parts of southern Africa, South America, New Zealand and Oceania. For example many species in the unique biotas of these regions share common Gondwana ancestors. ESA''s aim is to publish innovative research to encourage the sharing of information and experiences that enrich the understanding of the ecology of the Southern Hemisphere. Austral Ecology involves an editorial board with representatives from Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Brazil and Argentina. These representatives provide expert opinions, access to qualified reviewers and act as a focus for attracting a wide range of contributions from countries across the region. Austral Ecology publishes original papers describing experimental, observational or theoretical studies on terrestrial, marine or freshwater systems, which are considered without taxonomic bias. Special thematic issues are published regularly, including symposia on the ecology of estuaries and soft sediment habitats, freshwater systems and coral reef fish.
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