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Pollination efficiency and reproductive patterns in relation to local plant density,population size,and floral display in the rewarding Listera ovata (Orchidaceae)
Authors:REIN BRYS  HANS JACQUEMYN  MARTIN HERMY
Affiliation:1. Division of Forest, Nature and Landscape Research, Catholic University of Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200E, B‐3001 Leuven, Belgium;2. Research Institute for Nature and Forest, Kliniekstraat 25, B‐1070 Brussels, Belgium;3. Division of Plant Ecology and Systematics, Biology Department, University of Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 31, B‐3001 Heverlee, Belgium
Abstract:Pollination efficiency and reproductive success vary strongly among populations of most animal‐pollinated plant species, depending on their size and local density, whereas individual plants within populations experience varying levels of reproductive output as a result of differences in floral display. Although most orchid species have been shown to be severely pollination limited, few studies have investigated the impact of the above‐mentioned factors on pollination success and reproduction, especially in rewarding species. In this study, the impact of population size, local density of flowering plants, and floral display on the rates of pollinia export and fruit production was investigated in 13 natural populations of the rewarding terrestrial orchid Listera ovata. In addition, an emasculation experiment was set up to examine how floral display and local density of flowering plants affected the relative importance of cross‐ vs. geitonogamous pollination in determining fruit set. In the studied populations, pollination efficiency, pollen removal, and fruit set increased with increasing population size until a threshold value of 30–40 flowering plants was reached, above which pollination efficiency and reproductive output decreased again. On average, plants with large floral displays showed higher proportional pollinia removal and fruit set compared with smaller plants. Fruit production was also significantly and positively related to local plant density, whereas emasculation did not affect the relationship between local plant density and fruit set, suggesting that geitonogamous pollination did not affect the outcome of female function. The results of this study are discussed in the light of the flowering mechanism of the species and its generalized pollination system. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 157 , 713–721.
Keywords:common twayblade  female success  fruit set  geitonogamous vs. cross‐pollination  pollen dispersal  pollen limitation  pollinia removal
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