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Rewardlessness in orchids: how frequent and how rewardless?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 12:59 authored by Mani Shrestha, Adrian Dyer, Alan Dorin, Zong-Xin Ren, M Burd
About one-third of orchid species are thought to offer no floral reward and therefore attract pollinators through deception. Statements of this idea are common in the botanical literature, but the empirical basis of the estimate is rarely mentioned. We traced citation pathways for the one-third estimate in a sample of the literature and found that the paths lead to empirical foundations that are surprisingly narrow. Moreover, recent measurements have detected minute quantities of sugar available to insect visitors in some orchids thought to be rewardless, raising the possibility of a pollination strategy that is largely deceitful but different to absolute rewardlessness. The orchids are a well-studied group and there is no doubt that rewardlessness is common in the family. However, greater empirical effort is needed to verify rewardlessness in orchids and to explore geographic and environmental variation in the proportion of rewardless species.

History

Journal

Plant Biology

Volume

22

Start page

555

End page

561

Total pages

7

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 German Society for Plant Sciences and The Royal Botanical Society of the Netherlands

Former Identifier

2006099592

Esploro creation date

2022-11-02

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