Pollen-size comparisons among animal-pollinated angiosperms with different pollination characteristics |
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Authors: | Lawrence D Harder |
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Institution: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4 |
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Abstract: | Pollen volume varies among angiosperm species over five orders of magnitude, presumably because the functional advantages of pollen size depend on each species' particular pollination and fertilization conditions. This paper reports two studies that assess whether animal-pollinated species with different pollination systems differ correspondingly in pollen size, as would be expected if pollen size affected pollen transport. Analysis of nine Pedicularis species detected significant interspecific variation in pollen size; however, the overall mean pollen volume of species pollinated primarily by nectar-collecting bees did not differ significantly from that of species pollinated by pollen-collecting bees. Similarly, comparison of bee- and bird-pollinated congeners in 16 genera (nine families) from Australia and North America found considerable variation in pollen diameter within and between genera, but this variation was not associated consistency with differences in primary pollinator type (bee>bird for three genera, bee > bird for five genera, bee
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Keywords: | bee pollination bird pollination buzz pollination -plant mating pollen diameter pollen transport pollen volume pollinator type siring success |
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