Sexual Dimorphism in Catasetum Orchids: Forcible Pollen Emplacement and Male Flower Competition
1986; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Volume: 232; Issue: 4757 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1126/science.232.4757.1538
ISSN1095-9203
AutoresGustavo Adolfo Sierra Romero, Craig E. Nelson,
Tópico(s)Plant Diversity and Evolution
ResumoOrchids of the Neotropical genus Catasetum have sexually dimorphic flowers; that is, male and female flowers are distinctly different in shape and color. Male flowers forcibly attach a large pollinarium onto euglossine bees. Euglossa bees leave the male flower in response to pollinarium emplacement by Catasetum ochraceum and subsequently avoid male but not female flowers. This evidence suggests that sexual dimorphism promotes pollination. The aversion of the bee to pollinarium attachment and its avoidance of male flowers thereafter apparently reflect competition among male flowers that probably evolved concurrently with sexual dimorphism. Among Catasetum species, the extent of dimorphism is correlated with the degree of apparent aversion caused by the male flower (weight of the pollinarium). Thus, aversive pollinarium emplacement can account for widespread sexual dimorphism in Catasetum and for interspecific variations in its expression.
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