Janes Jasmine K, van der Voort Genevieve E, Huber Dezene P W
Biology Department Vancouver Island University Nanaimo British Columbia Canada.
Faculty of Environment University of Northern British Columbia Prince George British Columbia Canada.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Apr 10;14(4):e11223. doi: 10.1002/ece3.11223. eCollection 2024 Apr.
The Rich. (Orchidoideae) comprise a speciose genus of orchids primarily in the northern hemisphere, with up to 200 known species worldwide. Individual species are known to self-pollinate, but many rely on insect pollinators with characteristics such as floral color, timing of floral odor emissions, nectar rewards, and spur length associated with particular pollination syndromes. As with many orchids, some orchid-pollinator associations are likely highly co-evolved, but we also know that some spp. are the result of hybridization events, which implies a lack of pollinator fidelity in some cases. Some spp. occur in large numbers which, coupled with the numerous -pollinator systems, make them accessible as study species and useful for co-evolutionary studies. Due to the likely effects of climate change and ongoing development on spp. habitats, these orchids and their associated pollinators should be a focus of conservation attention and management. However, while there is a fairly substantial literature coverage of -pollinator occurrence and interactions, there are still wide gaps in our understanding of the species involved in these systems. In this systematic review, we outline what is current knowledge and provide guidance on further research that will increase our understanding of orchid-insect co-evolutionary relationships. Our review covers 157 orchid species and about 233 pollinator species interacting with 30 spp. We provide analyses on aspects of these interactions such as flower morphology, known insect partners of species, insect- specificity, pollination visitor timing (diurnal vs. nocturnal), floral rewards, and insect behavior affecting pollination outcomes (e.g., pollinia placement). A substantial number of spp. and at least a few of their known pollinators are of official (IUCN) conservation concern - and many of their pollinators remain unassessed or even currently unknown - which adds to the urgency of further research on these co-evolved relationships.
红门兰属(兰科)是一个兰花种类丰富的属,主要分布在北半球,全球已知物种多达200种。已知个别物种能进行自花授粉,但许多物种依赖昆虫传粉者,这些传粉者与特定的传粉综合征相关,具有花色、花香释放时间、花蜜回报和距长等特征。与许多兰花一样,一些兰花与传粉者的关联可能是高度协同进化的,但我们也知道一些物种是杂交事件的结果,这意味着在某些情况下缺乏传粉者专一性。一些物种数量众多,再加上众多的传粉者系统,使其成为适合研究的物种,对协同进化研究很有用。由于气候变化和持续发展可能对红门兰属物种的栖息地产生影响,这些兰花及其相关传粉者应成为保护关注和管理的重点。然而,虽然关于红门兰属传粉者的出现和相互作用已有相当多的文献报道,但我们对这些系统中涉及的物种的理解仍存在很大差距。在本系统综述中,我们概述了当前的知识,并为进一步研究提供指导,以增进我们对兰花 - 昆虫协同进化关系的理解。我们的综述涵盖了157种兰花物种和约233种与30种红门兰属物种相互作用的传粉者物种。我们对这些相互作用的各个方面进行了分析,如花朵形态、红门兰属物种已知的昆虫伙伴、昆虫专一性、传粉访客时间(昼行性与夜行性)、花蜜回报以及影响传粉结果的昆虫行为(如花粉块放置)。大量的红门兰属物种及其至少一些已知传粉者受到官方(世界自然保护联盟)的保护关注,而且它们的许多传粉者仍未得到评估甚至目前还不为人知,这增加了进一步研究这些协同进化关系的紧迫性。