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Reproductive biology and isolation mechanisms in rupicolous species of the Acianthera prolifera complex (Orchidaceae) occurring in southeastern Brazil
Authors:Marcos Cabral de Melo  Pedro Paulo Goulart Taucce  Eduardo Leite Borba
Affiliation:1. Departamento de Botanica, Laborat??rio de Sistem??tica Vegetal, Instituto de Ci??ncias Biol??gicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Ant?nio Carlos, 6627, Pampulha, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, 31270-901, Brazil
2. Centro de Ci??ncias Naturais e Humanas, Universidade Federal do ABC, Rua Santa Ad??lia, 166, Bangu, Santo Andr??, S?o Paulo, 09210-170, Brazil
Abstract:We studied the floral biology and performed experimental intra- and interspecific pollinations in populations of a complex of four Acianthera (Orchidaceae) species occurring in Brazilian campo rupestre vegetation (A.?hamosa, A.?limae, A.?modestissima, and A.?prolifera). All four species flower synchronously, are partially intercompatible, and exhibited some degree of self-sterility. Floral morphology is similar in all the species, with their principal differences associated with size of the floral structures. The four species were visited only by Diptera species of the families Phoridae (Megaselia spp.) and Chloropidae, but visits are rare and fruit set is very low. Sympatric species were not pollinated by the same Diptera species. Acianthera hamosa and A.?modestissima have the smallest flowers, and no marked morphological differences between them were observed; they were both pollinated by very similar Megaselia species. Both prepollination barriers and postpollination events are important to maintaining the isolation of the species, functioning as overlapping filters that diminish the possibility of gene flow between them. However, putative hybrids between A.?prolifera and A.?limae have been found. Conversely, A.?hamosa and A.?modestissima, which are recognized only by vegetative characters that show high phenotypic plasticity, seem only to be isolated by geographical barriers, and they may actually constitute a single species or be sister species.
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