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Tuning of color contrast signals to visual sensitivity maxima of tree shrews by three Bornean highland Nepenthes species
Authors:Jonathan A Moran  Charles Clarke  Melinda Greenwood  Lijin Chin
Institution:1.School of Environment & Sustainability; Royal Roads University; Victoria, BC Canada;2.School of Science; Monash University Sunway Campus; Jalan Lagoon Selatan; Selangor, Malaysia;3.School of Biological Science; Monash University Clayton Campus; Victoria, BC Australia
Abstract:Three species of Nepenthes pitcher plants (Nepenthes rajah, Nepenthes lowii and Nepenthes macrophylla) specialize in harvesting nutrients from tree shrew excreta in their pitchers. In all three species, nectaries on the underside of the pitcher lid are the focus of the tree shrews' attention. Tree shrews are dichromats, with visual sensitivity in the blue and green wavebands. All three Nepenthes species were shown to produce visual signals, in which the underside of the pitcher lid (the area of highest nectar production) stood out in high contrast to the adjacent area on the pitcher (i.e., was brighter), in the blue and green wavebands visible to the tree shrews. N. rajah showed the tightest degree of “tuning,” notably in the green waveband. Conversely, pitchers of Nepenthes burbidgeae, a typical insectivorous species sympatric with N. rajah, did not produce a color pattern tuned to tree shrew sensitivity maxima.
Keywords:mutualism  Nepenthes  pitcher plants  tree shrews  Tupaia  visual signaling
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