Wright Geraldine A, Choudhary Amir F, Bentley Michael A
Biology Division, Centre for Behaviour and Evolution, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2009 Jul 22;276(1667):2597-604. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.0040. Epub 2009 Apr 15.
Plants produce flowers with complex visual and olfactory signals, but we know relatively little about the way that signals such as floral scents have evolved. One important factor that may direct the evolution of floral signals is a pollinator's ability to learn. When animals learn to associate two similar signals with different outcomes, biases in their responses to new signals can be formed. Here, we investigated whether or not pollinators develop learned biases towards floral scents that depend on nectar reward quality by training restrained honeybees to learn to associate two similar odour signals with different outcomes using a classical conditioning assay. Honeybees developed learned biases towards odours as a result of differential conditioning, and the extent to which an olfactory bias could be produced depended upon the difference in the quality of the nectar rewards experienced during conditioning. Our results suggest that differences in reward quality offered by flowers influence odour recognition by pollinators, which in turn could influence the evolution of floral scents in natural populations of co-flowering plants.
植物会开出带有复杂视觉和嗅觉信号的花朵,但我们对诸如花香这类信号的进化方式了解相对较少。一个可能指导花香信号进化的重要因素是传粉者的学习能力。当动物学会将两个相似的信号与不同的结果联系起来时,它们对新信号的反应就可能会形成偏差。在这里,我们通过经典条件反射试验训练被限制活动的蜜蜂,使其学会将两种相似的气味信号与不同的结果联系起来,以此来研究传粉者是否会对依赖花蜜奖励质量的花香形成习得性偏差。由于差异条件作用,蜜蜂对气味形成了习得性偏差,而产生嗅觉偏差的程度取决于条件作用期间所体验到的花蜜奖励质量的差异。我们的研究结果表明,花朵提供的奖励质量差异会影响传粉者对气味的识别,这反过来又可能影响同域开花植物自然种群中花香的进化。