[花向传粉者传递信号的多种方式]。

Q4 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Biologie Aujourd''hui Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-27 DOI:10.1051/jbio/2024013
Yvan Kraepiel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

被子植物占世界陆生植物群的95%以上,它们的进化成功很大程度上取决于它们与动物传粉者的相互作用。事实上,据估计,平均87.5%的开花植物是由动物授粉的。大多数昆虫是由昆虫授粉的,但鸟类、蝙蝠、啮齿动物甚至蜥蜴也可以在某些物种的授粉中发挥重要作用。传粉者访花是为了寻找营养资源,如花蜜和花粉本身,花蜜含有高浓度的糖,以满足它们的能量需求,而花粉本身通常会大量产生,是氨基酸、脂质和维生素的主要来源。传粉的效率,即花粉从一朵花转移到同一物种的另一朵花,是基于给定物种的花发出的特定信号,传粉者学会将这些信号与该物种产生的花朵奖励联系起来。动物在相对较远的距离上定位花,这要归功于全球的彩色斑块,称为花展示,由或多或少分组的花或花序产生。一旦接近或接近花朵,传粉者就会使用特定物种的颜色信号来准确识别哪些花朵含有它们正在寻找的资源以及它们的位置。这些视觉信号几乎是无限多样的,主要是由花瓣发出的,主要是基于大量的类黄酮色素、花青素和类胡萝卜素。传粉者也从挥发性有机化合物混合物产生的复杂嗅觉信号中学习。这些分子属于三个主要的化学类别。萜类化合物含量最多,其次是苯丙素,第三是脂肪酸衍生的分子,但某些物种也会释放出一些硫、胺或脂肪酸。挥发性物质的混合物是从位于花瓣或蜜腺等花器官表面的特殊组织中释放出来的,这些组织被称为渗透团。一些被子植物物种用不产花蜜的欺骗性花朵吸引传粉昆虫。其中一些物种模仿同属开花的有益花朵的颜色、形状和气味。其他的,主要是兰花科的,通过模仿雌蜂在性欺骗花中的信息素混合物来吸引一种蜜蜂的雄性,导致传粉者的伪种群行为。繁殖地点的嗅觉模仿是另一种常见的欺骗花的策略,或多或少地吸引专门授粉的苍蝇和甲虫。由于这些欺骗性的信号,欺骗性的花节省了分配给花奖励的能量。花发出的视觉和嗅觉信号已经被描述和研究了很多年,但植物与传粉者之间相互作用的其他信号最近才得到重视。例如,与花有关的花器官或植物结构反射的回声使采蜜蝙蝠能够回声定位特定植物的花资源。静电相互作用是由正极昆虫(如大黄蜂或食蚜蝇)和负极花朵之间的极性差异产生的,导致机械感觉胸毛的运动,并提供一个信号,表明以前没有访问过那朵花,并且假定花中存在花蜜。这种电信号似乎在昆虫的学习和觅食效率中起着重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[The many ways flowers send signals to pollinators].

The evolutionary success of angiosperms, which make up more than 95 percent of the world's terrestrial flora, is largely based on their interactions with animal pollinators. Indeed, it is estimated that, on average, 87.5 percent of flowering plants are pollinated by animals. The majority are pollinated by insects, but birds, bats, rodents and even lizards can play a significant role in the pollination of some species. Pollinators visit flowers in search of nutritional resources such as nectar, which contains high concentrations of sugars to meet their energy needs, and the pollen itself, which is usually produced in large quantities and is their main source of amino acids, lipids and vitamins. The efficiency of pollination, i.e. the transfer of pollen from one flower to another of the same species, is based on specific signals emitted by the flowers of a given species, which pollinators learn to associate with the presence of floral rewards produced by that species. Animals locate flowers at relatively long distances thanks to global coloured patches, called floral display, produced by more or less grouped flowers or inflorescences. Once near or on the flower, pollinators use species-specific colour signals to identify exactly which flowers contain the resources they are looking for and where they are located. The almost infinite variety of these visual signals, mostly emitted by the petals, is based mainly on the numerous flavonoid pigments anthocyanins and carotenoids. Pollinators also learn from the complex olfactory signals produced by the mixture of volatile organic compounds. These molecules belong to three main chemical classes. Terpenoids are the most abundant, phenylpropanoids the second, and fatty acid-derived molecules the third, but some sulphurs, amines or aliphatic acids are also emitted by some species. Blends of volatiles are emitted from specialised tissues, named osmophores, located on the surface of floral organs as petals or nectaries. Some angiosperm species attract pollinating insects with deceptive flowers that don't produce nectar. Some of these species mimic the colour, shape and scent of rewarding flowers that bloom sympatrically. Others, mainly in the orchid family, specifically attract the males of a bee species by mimicking the pheromone mixture of females in sexually deceptive flowers, resulting in pseudocopulation behaviour of pollinators. Brood site olfactive mimicry is another common strategy of deceptive flowers attracting more or less specifically pollinating flies and beetles. Thanks to these deceptive signals, deceptive flowers save the energy allocated to the production of floral rewards. The visual and olfactory signals emitted by flowers have been described and studied for many years, but other signals involved in the interaction between plants and their pollinators have been highlighted recently. For example, the echo reflected from floral organs or plant structures associated with flowers allows nectar-feeding bats to echolocate the floral resources of particular plants. Electrostatic interactions generated by differences in polarity between a positive insect, such as a bumblebee or a hoverfly, and a negative flower lead to movements of mechanosensory thoracic hairs and provide a signal indicating the absence of a previous visit to that flower and the putative presence of nectar in the flower. This electrical signal appeared to play a significant role in insect learning and foraging efficiency.

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来源期刊
Biologie Aujourd''hui
Biologie Aujourd''hui Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
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