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Morphological flexibility across an environmental gradient in the epiphytic orchid,Tolumnia variegata: complicating patterns of fitness
Authors:MARIELY MORALES  JAMES D ACKERMAN  RAYMOND L TREMBLAY
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of Puerto Rico, PO Box 23360, San Juan, PR 00931‐3360, USA;2. Center for Applied Tropical Ecology and Conservation, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR 00931, USA;3. Department of Biology, University of Puerto Rico, Humacao, PR 00791‐4300, USA
Abstract:Deceit‐pollinated orchid species show substantial variation in floral traits, which may be maintained by genetic drift or various forms of selection, or may reflect phenotypic plasticity. We explored how much plasticity occurs in both vegetative and floral traits of Tolumnia variegata (Oncidiinae, Orchidaceae) across two different light environments in Puerto Rico using data from a reciprocal transplant experiment. We also examined how fruit set, a measure of reproductive success and a surrogate for fitness, is associated with this morphological variation, and whether it changes over time. Tolumnia variegata responded to environmental variables in multiple ways. Vegetative characters were more plastic than those associated with sexual reproduction. Transplant effects accounted for significant variation in flower length, lip length, number of inflorescences, peduncle length, leaf length and the total number of ramets, but responses were not always consistent among years. Phenotypic selection on morphological characters was dependent on plant location. The trends detected were complex, and often inconsistent across years, probably as a result of wetter and drier years than average. Overall fruit set was quite variable among plants, averaging 15%, with no significant differences among sun and shade plants. Although reproductive success was similar among sites, habitat heterogeneity and annual variation had an effect on morphological expression, which sometimes modified the trajectories of phenotypic selection. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 163 , 431–446.
Keywords:deception pollination  floral evolution  morphological variation  Orchidaceae  phenotypic plasticity  pollination ecology  Puerto Rico  reproductive success
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