Publication:
Pollinator response to yellow UV-patterned versus white UV-patternless flower dimorphism in Anemone palmata

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Publication date

Reading date

Event date

Start date of the public exhibition period

End date of the public exhibition period

Authors

Rodríguez-Castañeda, N.L.
Arista, M.
Narbona, E.
Ortiz, P.L.

Advisors

Authors of photography

Person who provides the photography

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

- Flower colour polymorphisms are uncommon but widespread among angiosperms and can be maintained by a variety of balancing selection mechanisms. Anemone palmata is mostly yellow-flowered, but white-flowered plants coexist in some populations. - We analysed the distribution of colour morphs of A. palmata across its range. We also characterised their colours and compared their vegetative and sexual reproductive traits, pollinator attention and fitness. - The range of A. palmata is limited to the Western Mediterranean, while white-flowered plants are restricted to Portugal and SW Spain, where they occur at low proportions. Yellow flowers have a characteristic UV pattern, with a UV-absorbing centre and UV-reflecting periphery, which is absent in the white morph. Colour features of both morphs were highly delineated, making it easy for pollinators to distinguish them. Both morphs were protogynous, with the same duration of sexual stages, and the main floral traits related to pollinator attraction, apart from flower colour, were similar. Hymenoptera and Diptera were the main pollinators, showing preference for the yellow morph, clear partitioning of pollinator groups between the two colour morphs and a marked constancy to flower colour during foraging. Both morphs combined clonal propagation with sexual reproduction, but sexual reproductive potential was lower in white-flowered plants. Finally, female fitness was higher in the yellow morph. - Pollinator partitioning and colour constancy could maintain this polymorphism, despite the lower visitation rate and fitness of white-flowered plants, which could facilitate their clonal propagation.

Doctoral program

Related publication

Research projects

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/AEI/Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2017-2020/PID2020-116222GB-I00/ES/CONCILIANDO PATRONES Y PROCESOS EN LA EVOLUCION DEL COLOR FLORAL/

Description

Proyectos de investigación Project UPO-1261687, European Regional Development Fund, program FEDER Andalucía 2014-2020

Bibliographic reference

Rodríguez-Castañeda, N.L., Buide, M.L., Arista, M., Narbona, E. and Ortiz, P.L. (2024), Pollinator response to yellow UV-patterned versus white UV-patternless flower dimorphism in Anemone palmata. Plant Biol J. https://doi.org/10.1111/plb.13702

Photography rights