The evolution of pollinator-plant interaction types in the araceae

Marion Chartier, Marc Gibernau, Susanne S. Renner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

58 Scopus citations

Abstract

Most plant-pollinator interactions are mutualistic, involving rewards provided by flowers or inflorescences to pollinators. Antagonistic plant-pollinator interactions, in which flowers offer no rewards, are rare and concentrated in a few families including Araceae. In the latter, they involve trapping of pollinators, which are released loaded with pollen but unrewarded. To understand the evolution of such systems, we compiled data on the pollinators and types of interactions, and coded 21 characters, including interaction type, pollinator order, and 19 floral traits. A phylogenetic framework comes from a matrix of plastid and new nuclear DNA sequences for 135 species from 119 genera (5342 nucleotides). The ancestral pollination interaction in Araceae was reconstructed as probably rewarding albeit with low confidence because information is available for only 56 of the 120-130 genera. Bayesian stochastic trait mapping showed that spadix zonation, presence of an appendix, and flower sexuality were correlated with pollination interaction type. In the Araceae, having unisexual flowers appears to have provided the morphological precondition for the evolution of traps. Compared with the frequency of shifts between deceptive and rewarding pollination systems in orchids, our results indicate less lability in the Araceae, probably because of morphologically and sexually more specialized inflorescences.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1533-1543
Number of pages11
JournalEvolution
Volume68
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2014

Keywords

  • Ancestral state reconstruction
  • Inflorescence traits
  • Phylogeny
  • Pollination syndromes
  • Trap flowers

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