Abstract

While the majority of angiosperm plants have hermaphrodite flowers, where a single pollinator visit can achieve both pollen removal and deposition, 5%–6% of angiosperms, including zoophilous species, are dioecious, necessitating pollen transport from male plants to females. As such, dioecy is considered less adaptive under low-temperature conditions that tend to restrict or lower potential pollinator activity. Interestingly, however, a number of dioecious, zoophilous plants such as Eurya japonica Thunb. (Pentaphylacaceae) bloom in low-temperature seasons. This study made a quantitative assessment of flower visitors/pollinators of E. japonica blooming in early spring in central Japan. A total of 15 families in 4 orders of insects were recorded on both pistillate and staminate flowers of E. japonica, of which Diptera (Empididae and Chironomidae, in particular) and Hymenoptera were predominant regardless of site/year. Hymenopteran visitors were more active at higher temperatures, while dipterans were observed even at low temperatures. The fruiting rate and the number of seeds were greater at the site where dipteran visitors were more abundant. The present study suggests that the system of multi-taxa, Diptera-dominated pollination may play an important role in the reproductive ecology of dioecious plant species, in particular those flowering at low temperatures.

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