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Pollen adaptation to ant pollination: A case study from the Proteaceae

Annals of Botany, ISSN: 1095-8290, Vol: 126, Issue: 3, Page: 377-386
2020
  • 33
    Citations
  • 191
    Usage
  • 72
    Captures
  • 3
    Mentions
  • 9
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    33
  • Usage
    191
  • Captures
    72
  • Mentions
    3
    • News Mentions
      2
      • News
        2
    • References
      1
      • Wikipedia
        1
  • Social Media
    9
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      9
      • Facebook
        9

Most Recent News

Bees? Please. These plants are putting ants to work

This is the first plant species in the world found to have adapted traits that enables a mutually beneficial relationship with ants.

Article Description

Background and Aims: Ant-plant associations are widely diverse and distributed throughout the world, leading to antagonistic and/or mutualistic interactions. Ant pollination is a rare mutualistic association and reports of ants as effective pollinators are limited to a few studies. Conospermum (Proteaceae) is an insect-pollinated genus well represented in the south-western Australia biodiversity hotspot, and here we aimed to evaluate the role of ants as pollinators of C. undulatum. Methods: Pollen germination after contact with several species of ants and bees was tested for C. undulatum and five co-flowering species for comparison. We then sampled the pollen load of floral visitors of C. undulatum to assess whether ants carried a pollen load sufficient to enable pollination. Lastly, we performed exclusion treatments to assess the relative effect of flying- and non-flying-invertebrate floral visitors on the reproduction of C. undulatum. For this, we measured the seed set under different conditions: ants exclusion, flying-insects exclusion and control. Key Results: Pollen of C. undulatum, along with the other Conospermum species, had a germination rate after contact with ants of ~80 % which did not differ from the effect of bees; in contrast, the other plant species tested showed a drop in the germination rate to ~10 % following ant treatments. Although ants were generalist visitors, they carried a pollen load with 68-86 % of suitable grains. Moreover, ants significantly contributed to the seed set of C. undulatum. Conclusions: Our study highlights the complexity of ant-flower interactions and suggests that generalizations neglecting the importance of ants as pollinators cannot be made. Conospermum undulatum has evolved pollen with resistance to the negative effect of ant secretions on pollen grains, with ants providing effective pollination services to this threatened species.

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