Abstract

How floral polymorphism of flowering plants can be maintained in evolutionary time has long intrigued ecologists and is still debated. In particular, how floral colour polymorphism influences reproductive success is still poorly understood. Here, we investigated the case of Orchis mascula, a deceptive orchid species in which the presence of rare white-flowered individuals is known to increase the percentage pollination of co-occurring coloured morphs. In a brief review, we report all the orchid species for which rare colour morphs are recorded and show that colour polymorphism occurs in most orchid genera occurring in France. In this study, more than 20,000 individuals of O. mascula were surveyed and some rare clear pink morphs were recorded. The frequencies of white-flowered and clear pink-flowered individuals were 0.59% and 0.28%, respectively. These two rare-colour flowered individuals were not randomly distributed and restricted to a few populations. In addition, the presence of pink-flowered individuals and the use of experimental pink lures resulted in an increase in the percentage pollination of surrounding purple-flowered individuals, as previously shown for white-flowered individuals and white lures. These new observations favour kin selection as the means by which floral colour polymorphism is maintained in this species. We suggest conducting comparative studies of other species in order to evaluate the importance of this mechanism in orchid pollination and that of other plant families.

Highlights

  • The maintenance of colour polymorphism has long intrigued ecologists

  • We recently discovered rare pink-flowered individuals occurring regularly in natural populations of purple-flowered individuals. We investigated this new case of colour polymorphism by addressing the following questions: (1) Do white-flowered individuals currently occur in other species of orchid in France? (2) What are the frequencies and the distributions of white-flowered and pink-flowered individuals in O. mascula populations? (3) Do pink-flowered individuals have a similar effect on percentage pollination as that already shown for white-flowered individuals? Based on our results, we offer new arguments to tentatively account for the maintenance of rare colour-flowered plants in orchids

  • Presence of rare hypochromic individuals This brief review of the literature revealed that white-flowered individuals are recorded in 36 species in France and this phenomenon certainly occurs elsewhere in Europe

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Summary

Introduction

Many flowering plants show substantial intraspecific variation in floral colour (Weiss 1995; Galen 1999; Warren and MacKenzie 2001). The key role of insects through pollinator-mediated selection is the current most often offered explanation for polymorphism in floral signals. Pollinators use diverse floral signals (flower colour, odour, size and shape) to detect flowers, and the various preferences of the different species of insect are a strong selective pressure for the evolution of the flowers they visit in search of rewards (Chittka and Raine 2006; Dormont et al 2010a). The relative role of these factors on floral polymorphism maintenance is still being debated as their importance as selective agents seems to vary among plant species

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