학술논문

Floral symmetry: pollinator-mediated stabilizing selection on flower size in bilateral species.
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. Nov2009, Vol. 276 Issue 1675, p4013-4020. 8p.
Subject
*POLLINATORS
*PLANT fertilization
*SYMMETRY (Biology)
*PLANT morphology
*MOUNTAIN meadows
FLOWER size
Language
ISSN
0962-8452
Abstract
Pollinator-mediated stabilizing selection (PMSS) has been proposed as the driver of the evolutionary shift from radial to bilateral symmetry of flowers. Studies have shown that variation in flower size is lower in bilateral than in radial species, but whether bilateral flowers experience more stabilizing selection pressures by employing fewer, more specialized pollinators than radial flowers remains unclear. To test the PMSS hypothesis, we investigate plant-pollinator interactions from a whole community in an alpine meadow in Hengduan Mountains, China, to examine: (i) variance in flower size and level of ecological generalization (pollinator diversity calculated using functional groups) in 14 bilateral and 13 radial species and (ii) the role pollinator diversity played in explaining the difference of variance in flower size between bilateral and radial species. Our data showed that bilateral species had less variance in flower size and were visited by fewer pollinator groups. Pollinator diversity accounted for up to 40 per cent of the difference in variance in flower size between bilateral and radial species. The mediator effect of pollinator diversity on the relationship between floral symmetry and variance in flower size in the community is consistent with the PMSS hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]