Abstract

Plant–bird pollination interactions evolved independently on different continents. Specific adaptations can lead to their restriction when potential partners from distant evolutionary trajectories come into contact. Alternatively, these interactions can be enabled by convergent evolution and subsequent ecological fitting.We studied the interactions between New World plants from the genus Heliconia, Asian plants of genus Etlingera and African sunbirds on a local farm in Cameroon. Heliconia spp. evolved together with hummingbirds and Etlingera spp. with spiderhunters —an oriental subgroup of the sunbird family.Sunbirds fed on all studied plants and individual plant species were visited by a different sunbird spectrum. We experimentally documented a higher number of germinated pollen grains in sunbird‐visited flowers of Etlingera spp. For Heliconia spp., this experiment was not successful and pollen tubes were rarely observed, even in hand‐pollinated flowers, where enough pollen was deposited. The analyses of contacts with plant reproductive organs nevertheless confirmed that sunbirds are good pollen vectors for both Heliconia and Etlingera species.Our study demonstrated a high ecological fit between actors of distinct evolutionary history and the general validity of bird‐pollination syndrome. We moreover show that trait matching and niche differentiation are important ecological processes also in semi‐artificial plant‐pollinator systems.

Highlights

  • Evolutionary trajectories and related adaptations of ornithophilous plants and nectarivorous birds differ on individual continents and in different phylogenetic plant and bird lineages (Abrahamczyk, 2019; Fleming & Muchhala, 2008)

  • We studied the interactions between New World plants from the genus Heliconia, Asian plants of genus Etlingera and African sunbirds on a local farm in Cameroon

  • Our study demonstrated a high degree of ecological fitting

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

We can find many hummingbird-pollinated plant species which have their flowers oriented into free space in the New World (Westerkamp, 1990) and different plant adaptations which enable perching of passerine birds in the Old World (Frost & Frost, 1981; de Waal, Anderson, & Barrett, 2012). The farms represent a unique place to study the consequences of specific and convergent adaptations, as well as possible ecological community processes such as niche differentiation Using this system, we tested the following three scenarios: (a) complete noncompatibility, local sunbirds do not visit any of the plants which evolved on different continents; (b) partial ecological fitting, where birds visit the plants but do not pollinate them (c) full ecological fitting, where birds visit alien plants and pollinate them. We decided to determine nectar production and nectar concentration of individual plants to see whether observed patterns can be explained by offered rewards

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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