A Review on the Pollination of Aroids with Bisexual Flowers1
This paper presents an exhaustive review of the current knowledge on pollination of Araceae genera with bisexual flowers. All available studies on floral morphology, flowering sequence, floral scent, floral thermogenesis, floral visitors, and pollinators were carefully examined, with emphasis on the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 2019-03, Vol.104 (1), p.83-104 |
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creator | Jiménez, Pedro Díaz Hentrich, Heiko Aguilar-Rodríguez, Pedro Adrián Krömer, Thorsten Chartier, Marion Cristina MacSwiney G, M Gibernau, Marc |
description | This paper presents an exhaustive review of the current knowledge on pollination of Araceae genera with bisexual flowers. All available studies on floral morphology, flowering sequence, floral scent, floral thermogenesis, floral visitors, and pollinators were carefully examined, with emphasis on the species-rich genera Anthurium Schott, Monstera Adans., and Spathiphyllum Schott. Genera with bisexual flowers are among the early-diverging lineages in Araceae, but present adaptations in their floral ecology to a great variety of pollination vectors, such as bees, beetles, flies, and, unusually, wind. These clades have developed highly derived pollination systems, involving the use of floral scent as a reward. We conclude that floral scent chemistry plays a key role in the pollination biology of the plants and that, in some genera, reproductive isolation through variation in the emitted floral volatile compounds may have been the decisive factor in the speciation processes of sympatric species. |
doi_str_mv | 10.3417/2018219 |
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subjects | Anthurium Araceae bee pollination beetle pollination floral scent fly pollination Monstera Spathiphyllum |
title | A Review on the Pollination of Aroids with Bisexual Flowers1 |
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