Abstract

Flowering phenology is central to the ecology and evolution of most flowering plants. In highly-specific nursery pollination systems, such as that involving fig trees (Ficus species) and fig wasps (Agaonidae), any mismatch in timing has serious consequences because the plants must balance seed production with maintenance of their pollinator populations. Most fig trees are found in tropical or subtropical habitats, but the dioecious Chinese Ficus tikoua has a more northerly distribution. We monitored how its fruiting phenology has adapted in response to a highly seasonal environment. Male trees (where fig wasps reproduce) had one to three crops annually, whereas many seed-producing female trees produced only one fig crop. The timing of release of Ceratosolen fig wasps from male figs in late May and June was synchronized with the presence of receptive figs on female trees, at a time when there were few receptive figs on male trees, thereby ensuring seed set while allowing remnant pollinator populations to persist. F. tikoua phenology has converged with those of other (unrelated) northern Ficus species, but there are differences. Unlike F. carica in Europe, all F. tikoua male figs contain male flowers, and unlike F. pumila in China, but like F. carica, it is the second annual generation of adult wasps that pollinate female figs. The phenologies of all three temperate fig trees generate annual bottlenecks in the size of pollinator populations and for female F. tikoua also a shortage of fig wasps that results in many figs failing to be pollinated.

Highlights

  • The times of year when plants flower and set seed are not random, even among plant species growing in relatively aseasonal tropical environments [1]

  • We studied the fruit phenology of F. tikoua within its native range in China and address the following questions: (1) what is the flowering phenology of F. tikoua and does it vary between the sexes? (2) what proportion of the figs produced by F. tikoua are entered by pollinators and does this vary with season? (3) does this species exhibit convergence in reproductive phenology with F. carica, F. erecta and F. pumila? And if so (4) are male flowers present in male figs throughout the year, as in most fig trees, or are female-flower only figs produced seasonally, as recorded for two of the other extra-tropical dioecious fig tree species?

  • Like other dioecious fig trees, seed production in F. tikoua depends on pollencarrying adult female fig wasps being available at the times when receptive figs are present on female trees

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The times of year when plants flower and set seed are not random, even among plant species growing in relatively aseasonal tropical environments [1]. Abiotic factors include constraints imposed by physiological responses to temperatures, day lengths and other climatic variables, while biological factors include the availability of pollinators and seed dispersal agents and competition with other plants flowering at the same time [4, 5]. Strong climatic seasonality provides particular constraints, with threshold temperatures limiting both insect pollinator activity and the length of the period when floral and seed development can continue. This has led to widespread convergence in flowering times, most noticeably with a spring-time concentration of flowering [6, 7], despite potential competition for pollinators among animal-pollinated plants and increased likelihood of receipt of heterospecific pollen from other species flowering at the same time. Variation in flowering times has evolutionary implications, potentially contributing to reproductive isolation and speciation [8, 9, 10]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call