Heteranthery as a solution to the demand for pollen as food and for pollination - Legitimate flower visitors reject flowers without feeding anthers

Mesquita-Neto, J. N.; Costa, B. K. P.; Schlindwein, C.

Abstract

Heteranthery, the presence of feeding and pollinating anthers in the same flower, seems to mediate the evolutionary dilemma for plants to protect their gametes and yet provide food for pollinators. This study aims to elucidate the role of heteranthery in the buzz-pollinated Senna reniformis. The fecundity of pollen from long-, medium- and short-sized anthers was determined by hand cross-pollination experiments, and the quantity, size, ornamentation and viability of pollen of different anthers were compared. Rates of flower rejection by bees were measured in anther removal experiments to assess the preferences of flower visitors for feeding or pollinating anthers. Large bees, which were the effective pollinators of self-incompatible S.reniformis, avoided flowers without short feeding anthers, but not those without medium or long anthers. Illegitimate small and medium-sized bees were unresponsive to anther exclusion experiments. Long anthers deposited pollen on the back and short anthers on the venter of large bees. Pollen from long anthers had higher invitro viability and higher fruit and seed set after cross-pollination than pollen from other sized anthers. Short anthers produce feeding pollen to effective pollinators and long anthers are related to pollination of S.reniformis. Bee behaviour and size was found to directly influence the role of anthers in the division of labour'. Only large bee pollinators that carry the pollinating pollen from long anthers in safe sites' associated short anthers with the presence of food. In the absence of these larger bee pollinators, the role of heteranthery in S.reniformis would be strongly compromised and its function would be lost.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:000413524000011 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: PLANT BIOLOGY
Volumen: 19
Número: 6
Editorial: WILEY-BLACKWELL
Fecha de publicación: 2017
Página de inicio: 942
Página final: 950
DOI:

10.1111/plb.12609

Notas: ISI