Artículo de revista
Pollinator-mediated selection in a specialized pollination system: matches and mismatches across populations
Fecha
2010-06-17Registro en:
JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Volume: 23, Issue: 9, Pages: 1957-1968, 2010
1010-061X
Autor
Nattero, J.
Cocucci, A. A.
Medel Contreras, Rodrigo
Institución
Resumen
Most studies on pollinator-mediated selection have been performed in
generalized rather than specialized pollination systems. This situation has
impeded evaluation of the extent to which selection acts on attraction or
specialized key floral traits involved in the plant-pollinator phenotypic
interphase. We studied pollinator-mediated selection in four populations of
Nierembergia linariifolia, a self-incompatible and oil-secreting plant pollinated
exclusively by oil-collecting bees. We evaluated whether floral traits experience
variable selection among populations and whether attraction and fit traits
are heterogeneously selected across populations. Populations differed in every
flower trait and selection was consistently observed for corolla size and flower
shape, two traits involved in the first steps of the pollination process. However,
we found no selection acting on mechanical-fit traits. The observation that
selection occurred upon attraction rather than mechanical-fit traits, suggests
that plants are not currently evolving fine-tuned morphological adaptations to
local pollinators and that phenotypic matching is not necessarily an expected
outcome in this specialized pollination system.