Comparative pollination ecology, fruit and seed set in Corunastylis species (Orchidaceae)
Corunastylis species produce some of the smallest, fly-pollinated flowers of Australian orchids to offer liquid rewards. We observed and collected pollinarium vectors of four Corunastylis species ( C. filiformis, C. fimbriata, C. rufa and C. ruppii ) with overlapping flowering periods during the sum...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant systematics and evolution 2023-04, Vol.309 (2), p.7, Article 7 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Corunastylis
species produce some of the smallest, fly-pollinated flowers of Australian orchids to offer liquid rewards. We observed and collected pollinarium vectors of four
Corunastylis
species (
C. filiformis, C. fimbriata, C. rufa
and
C. ruppii
) with overlapping flowering periods during the summer–autumn months at five sites in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. The most common pollinarium vectors of all species were females of a single morphotype in the genus
Conioscinella
(Diptera: Chloropidae). This morphotype was less than 3 mm in length and carried dorsal depositions of pollinaria on its thorax. A chloropid could carry as many as two pollinaria and 25–50% of attached pollinia showed erosion, suggesting previous contact with receptive stigmas. Bagging experiments on three species showed low rates of mechanical self-pollination and no fruit set in
C. filiformis
,
C. fimbriata
and
C. ruppii
. The conversion rate of insect-pollinated flowers into fruit varied from 35 to 91% among these three species in NSW
versus C. ciliata
in Victoria. Seed development also varied with > 42–70% of seeds in the three species in NSW containing fully developed embryos. High levels of reproductive success in these three species in NSW and
C. ciliata
in Victoria were the same as for fruit sets in other orchid species in other genera with nectar-secreting flowers. As flowering periods, distributions and primary pollinators of four
Corunastylis
species in NSW overlapped so broadly there appears to be a lack of pre-zygotic interspecific isolation mechanisms. This study provided important pollination and reproductive information towards future conservation management of these orchid species. |
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ISSN: | 0378-2697 1615-6110 2199-6881 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00606-023-01845-3 |