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Floral colours in a world without birds and bees: the plants of Macquarie Island

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 00:33 authored by Mani Shrestha, Klaus Lunau, Alan Dorin, Brian Schulze, Mascha Bischoff, Martin Burd, Adrian Dyer
We studied biotically-pollinated angiosperms on Macquarie Island, a remote site in the Southern Ocean with a predominately or exclusively dipteran pollinator fauna, in an effort to understand how flower colour affects community assembly. We compared a distinctive group of cream-green Macquarie Island flowers to the flora of likely source pools of immigrants and to a continental flora from a high latitude in the northern hemisphere. We used both dipteran and hymenopteran colour models and phylogenetically informed analyses to explore the chromatic component of community assembly. The species with cream-green flowers are very restricted in colour space models of both fly vision and bee vision and represent a distinct group that plays a very minor role in other communities. It is unlikely that such a community could form by random immigration from continental source pools. Our findings suggest that fly pollination has imposed a strong ecological filter on Macquarie Island favouring floral colours that are rare in continental floras. This is one of the strongest demonstrations that plant-pollinator interactions play an important role in plant community assembly. Future work exploring colour choices by dipteran flower visitors would be valuable.

Funding

Pollination in a new climate: evolutionary simulation of bee and flower interactions for predicting impacts of climate change on pollination

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

A World Without Bees: simulating important agricultural insect pollinators

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1111/plb.12456
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 14388677

Journal

Plant Biology

Volume

18

Start page

842

End page

850

Total pages

9

Publisher

Wiley

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 German Botanical Society and The Royal Botanical Society of the Netherlands

Former Identifier

2006061228

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-04-21