Artículo de revista
Host-mediated volatile polymorphism in a parasitic plant influences its attractiveness to pollinators
Fecha
2010Registro en:
Oecologia (2010) 162:413–425
DOI 10.1007/s00442-009-1478-7
Autor
Troncoso, Alejandra J.
Cabezas, Nancy J.
Faúndez, Eric H.
Urzúa, Alejandro
Niemeyer Marich, August
Institución
Resumen
Host-plants can mediate the interactions
between herbivores and their mutualists and also between
parasitic plants and their mutualists. The present study
reveals how a hemiparasitic plant parasitizing three host
species gives rise to three distinct hemiparasite-host
neighborhoods which differ in terms of volatile composition
and pollinator attractiveness. The study was performed
in a population of the mistletoe Tristerix verticillatus
infecting three different species of hosts occurring in
sympatry within a small area, thus exposing all individuals
studied to similar abiotic conditions and pollinator diversity;
we assessed the effect of hosts on the hemiparasites’
visual and olfactory cues for pollinator attraction. During
the study period, the hemiparasite individuals were flowering
but the hosts were past their flowering stage. We
collected volatile organic compounds from the hemiparasite
and its hosts, measured floral display characteristics
and monitored bird and insect visitors to inflorescences of
T. verticillatus. We showed that: (1) floral patches did not
differ in terms of floral display potentially involved in the
attraction of pollinators, (2) hosts and hemiparasites on
each host were discriminated as distinct chemical populations
in terms of their volatile chemical profiles, (3) insect
visitation rates differed between hemiparasites parasitizing
different hosts, and (4) volatile compounds from the host
and the hemiparasite influenced the visitation of hemiparasite
flowers by insects. The study showed that a species
regarded as ‘‘ornithophilic’’ by its floral morphology was
actually mostly visited by insects that interacted with its
sexual organs during their visits and carried its pollen, and
that host-specific plant-volatile profiles within the T. verticillatus
population were associated with differential
attractiveness to pollinating insects.