TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-spurred Angraecum orchids and long-tongued sphingid moths on madagascar
T2 - A time frame for Darwin’s predicted Xanthopan/Angraecum coevolution
AU - Netz, Christoph
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Linnean Society of London.
PY - 2017/10
Y1 - 2017/10
N2 - Trait matching between the Madagascan orchid Angraecum sesquipedale, with a nectar spur of 33 cm, and a hawkmoth with a tongue almost as long has fascinated biologists since Darwin, who saw only flowers but correctly predicted the moth pollinator. This moth, Xanthopan morgani praedicta, was described from museum specimens in 1903 and documented as the pollinator in photographs and film in 1992 and 2004. However, Madagascar harbours c. 30 species of long-spurred orchids and seven species of long-tongued hawkmoths, and mutualisms between moths and ‘Angraecum and other deep tubular flowers’ (Darwin, 1862: p. 202) probably involve a network of interacting species. We infer the evolutionary time over which Madagascan sphingids and Angraecum have interacted, based on an orchid phylogeny that includes 62 of 144 Angraecum species on Madagascar and a moth phylogeny with all nine Madagascan Sphinginae. Clock models using either rate- or fossil-based calibrations imply that the Madagascan subspecies X. morgani praedicta and the African morgani diverged 7.4 ± 2.8 Mya, which overlaps the divergence of An. sesquipedale from its sister, Angraecum sororium, namely 7.5 ± 5.2 Mya; since both have extremely long spurs, long spurs probably existed before that. The phylogenies moreover show that several long-tongued moths and longspurred orchids probably coevolved on Madagascar since the mid-Miocene, although field data on the moths’ levels of polyphagy and pollen transport are lacking.
AB - Trait matching between the Madagascan orchid Angraecum sesquipedale, with a nectar spur of 33 cm, and a hawkmoth with a tongue almost as long has fascinated biologists since Darwin, who saw only flowers but correctly predicted the moth pollinator. This moth, Xanthopan morgani praedicta, was described from museum specimens in 1903 and documented as the pollinator in photographs and film in 1992 and 2004. However, Madagascar harbours c. 30 species of long-spurred orchids and seven species of long-tongued hawkmoths, and mutualisms between moths and ‘Angraecum and other deep tubular flowers’ (Darwin, 1862: p. 202) probably involve a network of interacting species. We infer the evolutionary time over which Madagascan sphingids and Angraecum have interacted, based on an orchid phylogeny that includes 62 of 144 Angraecum species on Madagascar and a moth phylogeny with all nine Madagascan Sphinginae. Clock models using either rate- or fossil-based calibrations imply that the Madagascan subspecies X. morgani praedicta and the African morgani diverged 7.4 ± 2.8 Mya, which overlaps the divergence of An. sesquipedale from its sister, Angraecum sororium, namely 7.5 ± 5.2 Mya; since both have extremely long spurs, long spurs probably existed before that. The phylogenies moreover show that several long-tongued moths and longspurred orchids probably coevolved on Madagascar since the mid-Miocene, although field data on the moths’ levels of polyphagy and pollen transport are lacking.
KW - Angraecum
KW - Coevolution
KW - Darwin
KW - Endemism
KW - Hawkmoths
KW - Molecular clocks
KW - Pollination
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85030702807&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/biolinnean/blx086
DO - 10.1093/biolinnean/blx086
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85030702807
SN - 0024-4066
VL - 122
SP - 469
EP - 478
JO - Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
JF - Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
IS - 2
ER -