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REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGY OF CLEISTES DIVARICATA (ORCHID ACEAE)
Authors:Katharine B. Gregg
Affiliation:Department of Biology, West Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, West Virginia, 26201
Abstract:In Cleistes divaricata, a hinged anther dispenses a sequence of loosely aggregated pollen tetrad masses onto the dorsal thorax of Bombus and Megachile workers. This mechanism allows more than one bee to receive pollen from a single flower. To determine the effectiveness of this strategy, plants in bud were caged and hand pollinated using pollen from sequential releases. Capsules produced from a flower's first three pollen dumps were significantly larger and heavier and contained more seeds than those produced by later pollen deposits with fewer tetrads. Decreasing pollen dosage did not affect fruit set, capsule development, individual seed weight, or percentage of healthy looking embryos per fruit. Fruit set for artificial pollinations was 93% for pollen dumps 1–3 and 97% for dumps 4–18. As set of naturally pollinated marked plants was only 38%, low frequency of pollinator visits apparently limited seed production. Efficacy of infrequent visits is maximized, however, because a flower's first pollen releases contain the most pollen, but later low-dosage dumps can produce some seeds. An unexpected cost was a higher investment of pericarp per seed in low-dosage capsules (130 ng pericarp seed-1 fresh weight) than in high-dosage pollinations (only 27 ng pericarp seed–1). Flower fading in plants receiving low pollen dosage was as slow as that in caged, unpollinated controls, thus increasing opportunity for additional pollination.
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