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Active pollination favours sexual dimorphism in floral scent
Authors:Tomoko Okamoto  Atsushi Kawakita  Ryutaro Goto  Glenn P Svensson  Makoto Kato
Institution:1.Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Sakyo, Kyoto, Japan;2.Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University, Otsu, Shiga, Japan;3.Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Solvegatan, Sweden
Abstract:Zoophilous flowers often transmit olfactory signals to attract pollinators. In plants with unisexual flowers, such signals are usually similar between the sexes because attraction of the same animal to both male and female flowers is essential for conspecific pollen transfer. Here, we present a remarkable example of sexual dimorphism in floral signal observed in reproductively highly specialized clades of the tribe Phyllantheae (Phyllanthaceae). These plants are pollinated by species-specific, seed-parasitic Epicephala moths (Gracillariidae) that actively collect pollen from male flowers and pollinate the female flowers in which they oviposit; by doing so, they ensure seeds for their offspring. We found that Epicephala-pollinated Phyllanthaceae plants consistently exhibit major qualitative differences in scent between male and female flowers, often involving compounds derived from different biosynthetic pathways. In a choice test, mated female Epicephala moths preferred the scent of male flowers over that of female flowers, suggesting that male floral scent elicits pollen-collecting behaviour. Epicephala pollination evolved multiple times in Phyllantheae, at least thrice accompanied by transition from sexual monomorphism to dimorphism in floral scent. This is the first example in which sexually dimorphic floral scent has evolved to signal an alternative reward provided by each sex, provoking the pollinator''s legitimate altruistic behaviour.
Keywords:Epicephala  floral scent  obligate pollination mutualism  Phyllanthaceae  sexual dimorphism
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