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Pollen as the link between floral phenotype and fitness
Authors:Øystein H Opedal  Rocío Pérez-Barrales  Vinícius L G Brito  Nathan Muchhala  Miquel Capó  Agnes Dellinger
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Lund University, Sölvegatan 37, Lund, 22362 Sweden;2. Botany Department, University of Granada, Granada, 18071 Spain

Contribution: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing;3. Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, Uberlândia, 38405-315 Brazil

Contribution: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing;4. Department of Biology, University of Missouri at Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing;5. Departamento de Sistemas y Recursos Naturales, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Contribution: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing;6. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Contribution: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing

Abstract:Pollen plays a key role in plant reproductive biology. Despite the long history of research on pollen and pollination, recent advances in pollen-tracking methods and statistical approaches to linking plant phenotype, pollination performance, and reproductive fitness yield a steady flow of exciting new insights. In this introduction to the Special Issue “Pollen as the Link Between Phenotype and Fitness,” we start by describing a general conceptual model linking functional classes of floral phenotypic traits to pollination-related performance metrics and reproductive fitness. We use this model as a framework for synthesizing the relevant literature, highlighting the studies included in the Special Issue, and identifying gaps in our understanding and opportunities for further development of the field. The papers that follow in this Special Issue provide new insights into the relationships between pollen production, presentation, flower morphology, and pollination performance (e.g., pollen deposition onto stigmas), the role of pollinators in pollen transfer, and the consequences of heterospecific pollen deposition. Several of the studies demonstrate exciting experimental and analytical approaches that should pave the way for continued work addressing the intriguing role of pollen in linking plant phenotypes to reproductive fitness.
Keywords:fitness function  flower–pollinator fit  heterospecific pollen transfer  path analysis  plant–pollinator interactions  pollen performance  pollen presentation  pollen production  pollen transfer  pollinator-mediated selection
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