Abstract

Colour is an important signal that flowering plants use to attract insect pollinators like bees. Previous research in Germany has shown that nectar volume is higher for flower colours that are innately preferred by European bees, suggesting an important link between colour signals, bee preferences and floral rewards. In Australia, flower colour signals have evolved in parallel to the Northern hemisphere to enable easy discrimination and detection by the phylogenetically ancient trichromatic visual system of bees, and native Australian bees also possess similar innate colour preferences to European bees. We measured 59 spectral signatures from flowers present at two preserved native habitats in South Eastern Australia and tested whether there were any significant differences in the frequency of flowers presenting higher nectar rewards depending upon the colour category of the flower signals, as perceived by bees. We also tested if there was a significant correlation between chromatic contrast and the frequency of flowers presenting higher nectar rewards. For the entire sample, and for subsets excluding species in the Asteraceae and Orchidaceae, we found no significant difference among colour categories in the frequency of high nectar reward. This suggests that whilst such relationships between flower colour signals and nectar volume rewards have been observed at a field site in Germany, the effect is likely to be specific at a community level rather than a broad general principle that has resulted in the common signalling of bee flower colours around the world.

Highlights

  • Many floral traits play a role in the reproduction of animal-pollinated angiosperms [1,2,3,4,5]

  • One sample was classified into the UV hexagon sector: Hypericum pygmae (Clusiaceae) and this hexagon sector was excluded from all subsequent analyses

  • Following categorization of species based on this threshold value (Fig 3A), we found no significant difference among hexagon sectors in the proportion of species with a high sugar content (χ2 = 3.97, P = 0.466)

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Summary

Introduction

Many floral traits play a role in the reproduction of animal-pollinated angiosperms [1,2,3,4,5]. Colour is one of the most important signals used by flowering plants to communicate to their pollinators [6,7,8,9,10]. What relationship between floral colour and nectar should evolve in plants? Whilst nectar has been well studied in flowering plants [15,17,18,19,20], the question of a potential relationship has been rarely considered because many animals have very different colour. Nectar and bee preference collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript What relationship between floral colour and nectar should evolve in plants? Whilst nectar has been well studied in flowering plants [15,17,18,19,20], the question of a potential relationship has been rarely considered because many animals have very different colour

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