Flowers' built-in symmetry keeps cross-pollination on track across diverse visitors
Navarro L.
Pollinators
Native shrubs in pollinator-friendly gardens can maintain healthy reproduction even as bee communities shift and butterflies or hummingbirds become more or less common from year to year.
Some plants come in two flower forms, one with a long style and one with a short style, so pollen lands on the right part of a different flower and seeds get made. Scientists wondered if having lots of different visitors, like butterflies, hummingbirds, and bees, would mess up this precise system. Turns out, all those visitors still mostly deliver pollen to the right flower type, because the flower's physical shape does the work regardless of who shows up.
Key Findings
Butterflies, hummingbirds, and bees all predominantly deposited intermorph (cross-type) pollen, maintaining mating accuracy across taxonomically diverse visitors.
Pollination effectiveness was concentrated in a subset of visitor species, but the directional bias toward cross-type pollen transfer was consistent across all groups.
Variation in floral traits such as corolla tube length, anther height, and stigmatic surface area did not explain differences in reciprocal pollen delivery among visitor taxa.
chevron_right Technical Summary
A study of a Caribbean flowering shrub found that even when many different pollinators visit, the plant's two-form flower structure reliably ensures pollen is transferred between the right flower types, keeping reproduction accurate despite a mixed pollinator crowd.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Generalized pollination maintains disassortative pollen transfer in a distylous tropical shrub.
<h4>Background and aims</h4>Distylous plants are expected to promote accurate intermorph pollen transfer through reciprocal positioning of sexual organs, yet many species are visited by taxonomical...
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Species Mentioned
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