955 resultados para floral odour


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We used a colour-space model of avian vision to assess whether a distinctive bird pollination syndrome exists for floral colour among Australian angiosperms. We also used a novel phylogenetically based method to assess whether such a syndrome represents a significant degree of convergent evolution. About half of the 80 species in our sample that attract nectarivorous birds had floral colours in a small, isolated region of colour space characterized by an emphasis on long-wavelength reflection. The distinctiveness of this 'red arm' region was much greater when colours were modelled for violet-sensitive (VS) avian vision than for the ultraviolet-sensitive visual system. Honeyeaters (Meliphagidae) are the dominant avian nectarivores in Australia and have VS vision. Ancestral state reconstructions suggest that 31 lineages evolved into the red arm region, whereas simulations indicate that an average of five or six lineages and a maximum of 22 are likely to have entered in the absence of selection. Thus, significant evolutionary convergence on a distinctive floral colour syndrome for bird pollination has occurred in Australia, although only a subset of bird-pollinated taxa belongs to this syndrome. The visual system of honeyeaters has been the apparent driver of this convergence.

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Floral scents are important information cues used to organize foraging-related tasks in honeybees. The waggle dance, apart from encoding spatial information about food sources, might facilitate the transfer of olfactory information by increasing the dissipation of volatiles brought back by successful foragers. By assuming that food scents are more intensive on specific body parts of returning foragers, i.e., the posterior legs of pollen foragers and mouthparts of nectar foragers, we quantified the interactions between hive mates and foragers during dances advertising different types of food sources. For natural sources, a higher proportion of hive mates contacted the hind legs of pollen dancers (where the pollen loads were located) with their heads compared to non-pollen dancers. On the other hand, the proportion of head-to-head contacts was higher for non-pollen foragers during the waggle runs. When the food scent was manipulated, dancers collecting scented sugar solution had a higher proportion of head-to-head contacts and a lower proportion around their hind legs compared to dancers collecting unscented solution. The presence of food odors did not affect in-hive behaviors of dancers, but it increased the number of trophallaxes in-between waggle runs (i.e., during circle phases). These results suggest that the honeybee dance facilitates the olfactory information transfer between incoming foragers and hive mates, and we propose that excitatory displays in other social insect species serve the same purpose. While recent empirical and theoretical findings suggested that the colony level foraging benefits of the spatial information encoded in the waggle dance vary seasonally and with habitats, the role of the dance as a compound signal not only indicating the presence of a profitable resource but also amplifying the information transfer regarding floral odors may be important under any ecological circumstances.

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In animal-pollinated plants with unisexual flowers, sexual dimorphism in floral traits may be the consequence of pollinator-mediated selection. Experimental investigations of the effects of variation in flower size and floral display on pollinator visitation can provide insights into the evolution of floral dimorphism in dioecious plants. Here, we investigated pollinator responses to experimental arrays of dioecious Sagittaria latifolia in which we manipulated floral display and flower size. We also examined whether there were changes in pollinator visitation with increasing dimorphism in flower size. In S. latifolia, males have larger flowers and smaller floral displays than females. Visitation by pollinators, mainly flies and bees, was more frequent for male than for female inflorescences and increased with increasing flower size, regardless of sex. The number of insect visits per flower decreased with increasing floral display in males but remained constant in females. Greater sexual dimorphism in flower size increased visits to male inflorescences but had no influence on the number of visits to female inflorescences. These results suggest that larger flower sizes would be advantageous to both females and males, and no evidence was found that females suffer from increased flower-size dimorphism. Small daily floral displays may benefit males by allowing extended flowering periods and greater opportunities for effective pollen dispersal.

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Most studies on selection in plants estimate female fitness components and neglect male mating success, although the latter might also be fundamental to understand adaptive evolution. Information from molecular genetic markers can be used to assess determinants of male mating success through parentage analyses. We estimated paternal selection gradients on floral traits in a large natural population of the herb Mimulus guttatus using a paternity probability model and maximum likelihood methods. This analysis revealed more significant selection gradients than a previous analysis based on regression of estimated male fertilities on floral traits. There were differences between results of univariate and multivariate analyses most likely due to the underlying covariance structure of the traits. Multivariate analysis, which corrects for the covariance structure of the traits, indicated that male mating success declined with distance from and depended on the direction to the mother plants. Moreover, there was directional selection for plants with fewer open flowers which have smaller corollas, a smaller anther-stigma separation, more red dots on the corolla and a larger fluctuating asymmetry therein. For most of these traits, however, there was also stabilizing selection indicating that there are intermediate optima for these traits. The large number of significant selection gradients in this study shows that even in relatively large natural populations where not all males can be sampled, it is possible to detect significant paternal selection gradients, and that such studies can give us valuable information required to better understand adaptive plant evolution.

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Shifts in pollination syndromes involve coordinated changes in multiple floral traits. This raises the question of how plants can cope with rapid changes in pollinator availability by the slow process of accumulation of mutations in multiple genes. Here we study the transition from bee to hawkmoth pollination in the genus Petunia. Interspecific crosses followed by single locus introgressions were used to recreate putative intermediate evolutionary stages in the evolution of moth pollination. The effect of the loss/gain of petal color was asymmetric: it had no influence on the established pollinator but enhanced visitation by the new pollinator. Therefore, shifts in pollination syndromes may proceed through intermediate stages of reduced specialization and consequently enhanced reproductive assurance. The loss of petal color in moth-pollinated Petunia involves null mutations in a single regulatory gene, An2. Such simple genetic changes may be sufficiently rapid and frequent to ensure survival during pollinator failure.

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Animal-mediated pollination is essential in the reproductive biology of many flowering plants and tends to be associated with pollination syndromes, sets of floral traits that are adapted to particular groups of pollinators. The complexity and functional convergence of various traits within pollination syndromes are outstanding examples of biological adaptation, raising questions about their mechanisms and origins. In the genus Petunia, complex pollination syndromes are found for nocturnal hawkmoths (P. axillaris) and diurnal bees (P. integrifolia), with characteristic differences in petal color, corolla shape, reproductive organ morphology, nectar quantity, nectar quality, and fragrance. We dissected the Petunia syndromes into their most important phenotypic and genetic components. They appear to include several distinct differences, such as cell-growth and cell-division patterns in the basal third of the petals, elongation of the ventral stamens, nectar secretion and nectar sugar metabolism, and enzymatic differentiation in the phenylpropanoid pathway. In backcross-inbred lines of species-derived chromosome segments in a transposon tagging strain of P. hybrida, one to five quantitative trait loci were identified for each syndrome component. Two loci for stamen elongation and nectar volume were confirmed in introgression lines and showed large allelic differences. The combined data provide a framework for a detailed understanding of floral syndromes from their developmental and molecular basis to their impact on animal behavior. With its molecular genetic tools, this Petunia system provides a novel venue for a pattern of adaptive radiation that is among the most characteristic of flowering plants.

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• Premise of the study: Isometric and allometric scaling of a conserved floral plan could provide a parsimonious mechanism for rapid and reversible transitions between breeding systems. This scaling may occur during transitions between predominant autogamy and xenogamy, contributing to the maintenance of a stable mixed mating system. • Methods: We compared nine disjunct populations of the polytypic, mixed mating species Oenothera flava (Onagraceae) to two parapatric relatives, the obligately xenogamous species O. acutissima and the mixed mating species O. triloba. We compared floral morphology of all taxa using principal component analysis (PCA) and developmental trajectories of floral organs using ANCOVA homogeneity of slopes. • Key results: The PCA revealed both isometric and allometric scaling of a conserved floral plan. Three principal components (PCs) explained 92.5% of the variation in the three species. PC1 predominantly loaded on measures of floral size and accounts for 36% of the variation. PC2 accounted for 35% of the variation, predominantly in traits that influence pollinator handling. PC3 accounted for 22% of the variation, primarily in anther–stigma distance (herkogamy). During O. flava subsp. taraxacoides development, style elongation was accelerated relative to anthers, resulting in positive herkogamy. During O. flava subsp. flava development, style elongation was decelerated, resulting in zero or negative herkogamy. Of the two populations with intermediate morphology, style elongation was accelerated in one population and decelerated in the other. • Conclusions: Isometric and allometric scaling of floral organs in North American Oenothera section Lavauxia drive variation in breeding system. Multiple developmental paths to intermediate phenotypes support the likelihood of multiple mating system transitions.

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Adaptations to new pollinators involve multiple floral traits, each requiring coordinated changes in multiple genes. Despite this genetic complexity, shifts in pollination syndromes have happened frequently during angiosperm evolution. Here we study the genetic basis of floral UV absorbance, a key trait for attracting nocturnal pollinators. In Petunia, mutations in a single gene, MYB-FL, explain two transitions in UV absorbance. A gain of UV absorbance in the transition from bee to moth pollination was determined by a cis-regulatory mutation, whereas a frameshift mutation caused subsequent loss of UV absorbance during the transition from moth to hummingbird pollination. The functional differences in MYB-FL provide insight into the process of speciation and clarify phylogenetic relationships between nascent species.

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El ajo constituye el principal producto agrícola no transformado destinado a la exportación en Mendoza. En la Argentina, la ausencia de cultivares específicas de ajo y producción de semilla fiscalizada han sido unas de las principales debilidades del sistema exportador. Para que los materiales provenientes de los planes de mejoramiento y saneados lleguen rápidamente al productor es necesario acelerar la tasa de multiplicación de los mismos. Con esta finalidad, los bulbillos aéreos que se forman en el extremo del escapo de ajo tipo “colorado" (Grupo IV, Argentina) libre de virus, pueden ser utilizados como propágulos en la producción de ajo “semilla". El objetivo general del presente trabajo fue establecer la influencia del: genotipo, liberación de virus (OYDV y LYSV), tamaño de “diente" empleado como propágulo, fertilización nitrogenada y conservación de los escapos luego de la cosecha, en la producción de bulbillos aéreos. En Mendoza, Argentina, se evaluaron durante el ciclo 1994, 32 introducciones de ajo tipo “colorado" de distinto origen, por su hábito de floración y producción de bulbillos aéreos. Se llevaron a cabo durante los años 1995 y 1996 dos ciclos de ensayos, en los que se evaluó en una población clonal de ajo “colorado criollo" (AR-I-051) y una de ajo “ruso" (AR-I-033) el efecto del saneamiento viral sobre la floración y producción de bulbillos aéreos, trabajando con material crónicamente enfermo y libre de OYDV y LYSV. En AR-I-051 además se estudió el efecto del tamaño de “diente" (2; 3,5 y 5 g ó 1,2; 3,2 y 5,2 g) e influencia de la fertilización nitrogenada (0, 50 y 100 kg.ha-1 de N como SO4(NH4)2). Entre 1995 y 1998, se compararon diversas métodos de “curado" de los escapos luego de la cosecha de las plantas (en planta entera, cortados de distintas longitudes, mantenidos en seco o con inmersión de sus bases en agua o en solución nutritiva con o sin el regulador del crecimiento CCC). Se concluye que la producción de bulbillos aéreos depende del genotipo considerado. En ajo “colorado" se distinguen 5 grupos por su modalidad de floración y potencialidad de producción de bulbillos. La producción de bulbillos aéreos útiles (>2,4 mm de diámetro) depende del tiempo transcurrido entre floración y cosecha y no entre plantación y floración. Se puede predecir la cantidad de bulbillos aéreos útiles (Numa) sobre la base del diámetro de espata (espa) y la longitud de escapo (long) al momento de cosecha, según la ecuación: Numa = - 81,62 + 4,79 espa + 1,05 long (r2 = 0,88). v La capacidad de cada genotipo de emitir escapos, disminuye con la liberación de OYDV y LYSV, por lo que la producción por hectárea de bulbillos aéreos útiles es menor en el material saneado. El empleo de material saneado, “dientes" grandes, como la fertilización con N producen plantas de mayor tamaño y con mayor área foliar, lo que se traduce en un mayor rendimiento en la producción de bulbos. Sin embargo, la producción de bulbillos aéreos por hectárea disminuye, debido al menor porcentaje de plantas que emiten escapos y no a la disminución del número de bulbillos por planta. En cambio, todas aquellas condiciones que favorecen menor expresión vegetativa de las plantas aumentan la emisión de escapos. El “curado" de los escapos separados de la planta madre se puede llevar a cabo sin necesidad de realizar la inmersión de la base de los mismos en agua o en solución nutritiva con o sin CCC. La longitud a la cual se deben cortar los escapos, de manera de no afectar la producción de bulbillos, depende del grado de crecimiento de los bulbillos en el campo. La longitud de corte del escapo en ajo “criollo", con escaso crecimiento de los bulbillos aéreos en el campo, no debe ser inferior a 50 cm. En ajo “ruso", que presenta al momento de cosecha de las plantas un desarrollo avanzado de los bulbillos aéreos, los escapos pueden cortarse de menor longitud, sin afectar la producción de bulbillos aéreos. La longitud del escapo, en planta o separado de ella, afecta la producción de bulbillos aéreos en forma directamente proporcional.