Floral isolation betweenAquilegia formosaandAquilegia pubescens
- 22 November 1999
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 266 (1435) , 2247-2252
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1999.0915
Abstract
The acquisition of floral nectar spurs is correlated with increased species diversity across multiple clades. We tested whether variation in nectar spurs influences reproductive isolation and, thus, can potentially promote species diversity using two species of Aquilegia, Aquilegia formosa and Aquilegia pubescens, which form narrow hybrid zones. Floral visitors strongly discriminated between the two species both in natural populations and at mixed-species arrays of individual flowers. Bees and hummingbirds visited flowers of A. formosa at a much greater rate than flowers of A. pubescens. Hawkmoths, however, nearly exclusively visited flowers of A. pubescens. We found that altering the orientation of A. pubescens flowers from upright to pendent, like the flowers of A. formosa, reduced hawkmoth visitation by an order of magnitude. In contrast, shortening the length of the nectar spurs of A. pubescens flowers to a length similar to A. formosa flowers did not affect hawkmoth visitation. However, pollen removal was significantly reduced in flowers with shortened nectar spurs. These data indicate that floral traits promote floral isolation between these species and that specific floral traits affect floral isolation via ethological isolation while others affect floral isolation via mechanical isolation.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Improved Procedure for Testing the Effects of Key Innovations on Rate of SpeciationThe American Naturalist, 1999
- Pollination, Angiosperm Speciation, and the Nature of Species BoundariesOikos, 1998
- Revealing the factors that promote speciationPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1998
- Floral Nectar Spurs and DiversificationInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 1997
- Maintenance of the Species Boundary between Silene dioica and S. latifolia (Red and White Campion)Oikos, 1997
- Effects of Differential Pollen-Tube Growth on Hybridization in the Louisiana IrisesEvolution, 1996
- Hybridization and the Extinction of Rare Plant SpeciesConservation Biology, 1996
- Spurring plant diversification: are floral nectar spurs a key innovation?Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1995
- Balancing Selection at Allozyme Loci in Oysters: Implications from Nuclear RFLPsScience, 1992
- Vicinism in Aquilegia vulgarisThe American Naturalist, 1933