Abstract

Abundance and visitation of pollinator assemblages tend to decrease with altitude, leading to an increase in pollen limitation. Thus increased competition for pollinators may generate stronger selection on attractive traits of flowers at high elevations and cause floral adaptive evolution. Few studies have related geographically variable selection from pollinators and intraspecific floral differentiation. We investigated the variation of Trollius ranunculoides flowers and its pollinators along an altitudinal gradient on the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and measured phenotypic selection by pollinators on floral traits across populations. The results showed significant decline of visitation rate of bees along altitudinal gradients, while flies was unchanged. When fitness is estimated by the visitation rate rather than the seed number per plant, phenotypic selection on the sepal length and width shows a significant correlation between the selection strength and the altitude, with stronger selection at higher altitudes. However, significant decreases in the sepal length and width of T. ranunculoides along the altitudinal gradient did not correspond to stronger selection of pollinators. In contrast to the pollinator visitation, mean annual precipitation negatively affected the sepal length and width, and contributed more to geographical variation in measured floral traits than the visitation rate of pollinators. Therefore, the sepal size may have been influenced by conflicting selection pressures from biotic and abiotic selective agents. This study supports the hypothesis that lower pollinator availability at high altitude can intensify selection on flower attractive traits, but abiotic selection is preventing a response to selection from pollinators.

Highlights

  • Plant-pollinator interactions are among the most active subjects of evolutionary biology since Darwin[1,2,3]

  • The present study investigates the clinal variation in Trollius ranunculoides flowers and its pollinators along an altitudinal gradient on the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and examines population-level phenotypic selection by pollinators

  • Except for petal width, the floral traits decreased significantly with altitude; the mean seed set per plant was relatively lower at high altitude (Fig. 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Plant-pollinator interactions are among the most active subjects of evolutionary biology since Darwin[1,2,3]. The intensity of plant-pollinator interactions are frequently correlated with geographic variation of flower traits in a clinal or mosaic fashion and shows environment-specific. Pollinator Selection on Floral Traits along Altitudinal Gradients selection by pollinators [6,7,8,9], abiotic factors can account for geographical variation of flowers under stressful conditions [10,11]. The geographical variation in floral morphology seen in many plant species may depend on differences in the species composition of pollinator assemblage, as well as visitation frequency and pollination efficiency [9, 13, 21,22,23]. Few studies have addressed selection on floral traits across populations with different pollinator assemblages [26,27,28], and rarely related intraspecific floral differentiation to geographically changing selection from pollinators

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