Document information

hdl:10101/npre.2008.1977.1
3 votes

Bird pollination of Canary Island endemic plants

Jeff Ollerton1, Louise Cranmer2, Ralph Stelzer2, Steve Sullivan1, & Lars Chittka2

Correspondence: (Login to view email address)

  1. University of Northampton
  2. Queen Mary University of London
Document Type:
Manuscript
Date:
Received 16 June 2008 14:47 UTC; Posted 16 June 2008
Subjects:
Evolutionary Biology and Ecology
Tags:
Abstract:

The Canary Islands are home to a guild of endemic, threatened bird pollinated plants. Previous work has suggested that these plants evolved floral traits as adaptations to pollination by flower specialist sunbirds, but subsequently they appear to be have co-opted passerine birds as sub-optimal pollinators. To test this idea we carried out a quantitative study of the pollination biology of three of the bird pollinated plants, Canarina canariensis (Campanulaceae), Isoplexis canariensis (Veronicaceae) and Lotus berthelotii (Fabaceae), on the island of Tenerife. Using colour vision models, we predicted the detectability of flowers to bird and bee pollinators. We measured pollinator visitation rates, nectar standing crops, as well as seed set and pollen removal and deposition. These data showed that the plants are effectively pollinated by non-flower specialist passerine birds that only occasionally visit flowers. The large nectar standing crops and extended flower longevities (>10days) of Canarina and Isoplexis suggests that they have evolved bird pollination system that effectively exploits these low frequency non-specialist pollen vectors and is in no way suboptimal. Seed set in two of the three species was high, and was significantly reduced or zero in flowers where pollinator access was restricted. In L. berthelotii, however, no fruit set was observed, probably because the plants were self incompatible horticultural clones of a single genet. We also show that, while all three species are easily detectable for birds, the orange Canarina and the red Lotus (but less so the yellow-orange Isoplexis) should be difficult to detect for insect pollinators without specialised red receptors, such as bumblebees. Contrary to expectations if we accept that the flowers are primarily adapted to sunbird pollination, the chiffchaff (Phylloscopus canariensis) was an effective pollinator of these species.

Discussion

Votes:

3 votes

(Login to vote)

Comments:

0 comments

(Login to post a comment)

(Login to share with a colleague)

Additional information

License:
This document is licensed to the public under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
How to cite this document:

Ollerton, Jeff , Cranmer, Louise , Stelzer, Ralph, Sullivan, Steve, and Chittka, Lars. Bird pollination of Canary Island endemic plants. Available from Nature Precedings <http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2008.1977.1> (2008)

Version info:

Other versions of this document in Nature Precedings

None.

Other versions of this document elsewhere on the web

None known.

Participate

Advertisement