Pollinators of tropical dioecious angiosperms

S. S. Renner, J. P. Feil

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120 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dioecy is frequent in tropical forests. Small, unspecialized pollinators may be among the factors responsible for gender separation in this habitat. The underlying assumption is that poor fliers and/or communal foragers frequently effect selfing which in turn, given sufficiently severe inbreeding depression, should favor the establishment of dioecy. At least 10% of the genera of the angiosperms includes dioecious species; in tropical flowering plants, however, pollinators are reliably known only in a few species. Whereas temperate dioecious species commonly are wind- or water-pollinated, anemophily is less important in tropical forests, but occurs in at least 30 dioecious genera. Survey of tropical dioecious zoophilous species in 29 genera (21 families) for which pollination information is available shows that these species have specialized flowers adapted to specific pollinators rather than generalized flowers suitable for diverse insects. Known pollinators include solitary and eusocial bees, beetles, moths, flies, wasps (including fig wasps), and rarely bats and birds, and cover a wide range in animal size and locomotive capabilities. Floral rewards comprise pollen, nectar, stylar mucilage, nutritious tissues, brood-places, and resins. About a third of the species offer no reward in the female morph, pollination by deceit apparently being common. Data thus do not support the hypothesis that there is a broad correlation between a dioecious breeding system and unspecialized pollination. -from Authors

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1100-1107
Number of pages8
JournalAmerican Journal of Botany
Volume80
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 1993

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