Notes on the pollination mechanisms ofMoraea inclinata andM. brevistyla (Iridaceae) |
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Authors: | Peter Goldblatt Peter Bernhardt John Manning |
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Affiliation: | (1) B. A. Krukoff Curator of African Botany, Missouri Botanical Garden, P.O. Box 299, 63166 St. Louis, MO, USA;(2) Department of Biology, St. Louis University, 63103 St. Louis, MO, USA;(3) Kirstenbosch Botanic Gardens, P. Bag X7, 7735 Claremont, South Africa |
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Abstract: | Individual flowers ofMoraea inclinata are nectariferous and last about six hours. They appear to be pollinated largely by bees in the familyHalictidae (Lasioglossum spp.,Nomia spp.,Zonalictus) and to a lesser extent by bees in the familyAnthophoridae (Amegilla). The mechanism of bee-pollination inM. inclinata is the Iris type ; i.e., each flower consists of three pollination units (an outer tepal, a partly exserted anther, and the opposed style branch which terminates in a pair of petal-like crests). Bees rarely visit more than one pollination unit per flower. Transferral of pollen to the bee is passive and nototribic although all bees collected on the flowers were female and 55% of the bees carried pollen loads with 2–5 pollen taxa in their scopae.Moraea brevistyla flowers are nectariferous but lack scent and last two days. They are visited infrequently by bees and only one femaleLasioglossum spec. carried the pollen ofM. brevistyla. Unlike flowers ofM. inclinata those ofM. brevistyla deposit pollen only on the head and thorax. Bee-mediated autogamy in both species is avoided due to the erratic foraging patterns of the bees and the flexibility of each stigma lobe as the bee backs out of the flower. Approximately 2–4 flowers in the inflorescences of both species (6–8 flowers/infloresence) develop into capsules. |
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Keywords: | Angiosperms Iridaceae Moraea inclinata M. brevistyla Bees Anthophoridae Halictidae Pollination mechanism flower morphology |
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