Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, Carbis Road, Scottsville 3209, South Africa.
Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, Carbis Road, Scottsville 3209, South Africa.
Curr Biol. 2021 Jan 11;31(1):238-246.e7. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.10.024. Epub 2020 Nov 5.
During the evolutionary history of flowering plants, transitions between pollinator groups (pollinator shifts) have been frequent, and contributed to the spectacular radiation of angiosperms. Although the evolution of floral traits during pollinator shifts has been studied in real time under controlled laboratory conditions, it is challenging to study in nature and therefore poorly understood. Using a comparative, multidisciplinary approach, we dissect the evolution of floral traits during a pollinator shift in the long-spurred African orchid Satyrium longicauda. Phylogenetic analysis and ecological experiments revealed a shift from moth- to oil-collecting bee pollination. Remarkably, flowers of the bee-pollinated form are similar in morphology, color, and overall volatile chemistry to those of moth-pollinated forms, but differ in having spurs that are mostly devoid of nectar, and have an elevated presence of the oil-derived compound diacetin, which oil-collecting bees use as a cue for oil presence. Experiments demonstrated that long spurs are critical for pollination of a moth-pollinated form, but are not needed for pollination of the bee-pollinated form. We conclude that the pollinator shift in Satyrium was mediated by a switch in chemistry of the pollinator reward. The ancestral presence of diacetin might have served as a pre-adaptation for bee pollination, whereas the current mismatch between flower morphology and bees is due to the retention of vestigial floral spurs. These results elucidate the sequence of floral evolution in the early stages of pollinator shifts and help to explain the assembly of suites of co-varying traits through pre-adaptation and vestigialization..
在有花植物的进化历史中,传粉者类群之间的转变(传粉者转移)非常频繁,这促进了被子植物的辐射进化。虽然在受控实验室条件下已经实时研究了传粉者转移过程中花部特征的进化,但在自然界中进行研究具有挑战性,因此了解甚少。本研究采用比较、多学科的方法,剖析了长距兰花 Satyrium longicauda 传粉者转移过程中花部特征的进化。系统发育分析和生态实验揭示了从蛾类传粉向访花熊蜂传粉的转变。值得注意的是,访花熊蜂传粉形式的花在形态、颜色和整体挥发性化学物质上与蛾类传粉形式的花相似,但在具有几乎不含花蜜的长距、并且存在油衍生化合物二乙酸酯的升高含量上存在差异,访花熊蜂将二乙酸酯作为油存在的线索。实验表明,长距对于蛾类传粉形式的传粉至关重要,但对于访花熊蜂传粉形式的传粉则不需要。我们得出结论,Satyrium 中的传粉者转移是由传粉者报酬化学物质的转变介导的。二乙酸酯的祖先存在可能是熊蜂传粉的预适应,而当前花形态与访花熊蜂之间的不匹配是由于残余花距的保留所致。这些结果阐明了传粉者转移早期阶段花部进化的顺序,并有助于通过预适应和残余化来解释共变特征集合的组装。