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The colorful language of Australian flowers

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 15:38 authored by Martin Burd, C Tristan Stayton, Mani Shrestha, Adrian Dyer
The enormous increase in phylogenetic information in recent years has allowed many old questions to be reexamined from a macroevolutionary perspective. We have recently considered evolutionary convergence in floral colors within pollination syndromes, using bird-pollinated species in Australia. We combined quantitative measurements of floral reflectance spectra, models of avian color vision, and a phylogenetic tree of 234 Australian species to show that bird-pollinated flowers as a group do not have colors that are significantly different from the colors of insect-pollinated flowers. However, about half the bird-pollinated flowers have convergently evolved a narrow range of colors with dominant longwavelength reflection far more often than would be expected by chance. These convergent colors would be seen as distinctly different from other floral colors in our sample when viewed by honeyeaters (family Meliphagidae), birds with a phylogenetically ancestral type of color vision and the dominant avian pollinators in Australia. Our analysis shows how qualitative ideas in natural history, like the concept of pollination syndromes, can be given more precise definition and rigorous statistical testing that takes into account phylogenetic information.

History

Journal

Communicative and Integrative Biology

Volume

7

Number

e28940

Issue

4

Start page

1

End page

2

Total pages

2

Publisher

Landes Bioscience

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Landes Bioscience

Former Identifier

2006048722

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-06-02

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