首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Monophily and pollination mechanisms in Angraecum arachnites Schltr. (Orchidaceae) in a guild of long-tongued hawk-moths (Sphingidae) in Madagascar
Authors:L ANDERS NILSSON  LARS JONSSON  LYDIA RASON  EMILE RANDRIANJOHANY
Institution:Institute of Systematic Botany, Uppsala University, P.O. Box 541, S-751 21 Uppsala, Sweden;Botanic Garden, Uppsala University, Villavägen 8, S-752 36 Uppsala, Sweden;Service de Botanique, Universitéde Madagascar, B.P. 906, Antananarivo 101, Madagasca
Abstract:Anthecological relations between a long-spurred angraecoid orchid and pollinating Sphingidae are documented for the first time. In a primary forest on the Central Plateau of Madagascar Angraecum arachnites Schltr. was found to be pollinated by and adapted to a single species of hawk-moth, Panogena lingens (Butler), despite abundance of many concurrent Sphingidae of which several were also long-tongued. Furthermore, P. lingens was dimorphic in the length and breadth of its proboscis and only the morph with the longest and most slender proboscis was recorded to pollinate A. arachnites . Exclusive and precise adaptation to the latter morph of P. lingens existed in floral morphology and probably in other characteristics such as flowering phenology and chemical signalling. Several concurrently flowering orchid species were sharing P. lingens as a pollinator resource. The monophily in A. arachnites is interpreted as a result of a refined long-term specialization developed within an archaic evolutionary relationship in a relatively stable environment. The extraordinary number and diversity of long-spurred Orchidaceae in Madagascar appears to be a direct coevolutionary consequence of an Old-World-unique diversity of long-tongued archaic Sphingidae that has persisted in this isolated land.
Keywords:Orchid  pollination  Angraecum  Sphingidae  archaic relationships  Madagascar
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号