Abstract

Plants with a small number of specific pollinators may be vulnerable to fluctuations in the availability of those pollinators, which could limit plant reproductive success and even result in extinction. Plants can develop mechanisms to mitigate this risk, such as apomixis. Reproductive assurance mechanisms have been largely ignored in obligate pollination mutualisms (OPMs), that are some of the most specialised of plant-pollinator interactions. Furthermore, although OPMs are often referred to as obligate, this is rarely tested. We performed a flower-bagging experiment to test if the unisexual flowers of Breynia oblongifolia could set fruit in the absence of its highly specialised seed-eating moth pollinators. Surprisingly, many bagged female flowers developed fruits, suggesting apomixis. We therefore conducted a second series of experiments in which we 1) added or excluded pollinators from caged plants; and 2) surveyed a wild population for apomictic reproduction using mother-offspring genotyping. In the absence of pollinators, no fruits developed. In addition, we detected no genetic evidence for apomixis when comparing between mothers and their offspring or between adults in a wild population. We explain the production of fruits in bagged branches by our discovery that B. oblongifolia can retain pollinated female flowers over the winter period. These flowers develop to fruits in the spring in the absence of male flowers or pollinators. Our study thus shows that B. oblongifolia is unable to produce fruit in the absence of its specialist moth pollinators. Thus, the highly specific interaction between plant and pollinators appears to be truly obligate.

Highlights

  • In plant-pollinator mutualisms, plants that rely on one, or a closely related group of pollinator species, may be at greater risk of reproductive failure (Waser et al 1996; Renner 1998)

  • Fifteen of the 32 bagged plants were found to have fruits that showed damage characteristic of seed feeding by Epicephala larvae, suggesting that Epicephala pollinators were present in the female flowers prior to the addition of the bags in the winter of 2016

  • We found no evidence to support the existence of apomixis, we believe we may have identified other traits that act to reduce the likelihood of reproductive failure

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Summary

Introduction

In plant-pollinator mutualisms, plants that rely on one, or a closely related group of pollinator species, may be at greater risk of reproductive failure (Waser et al 1996; Renner 1998). Plants that are visited by more specialised species of pollinator may be less likely to receive heterospecific pollen (Morales & Traveset 2008), can have greater pollination efficiency (Scopece et al 2010) and may show increased gene flow between populations (Scopece et al 2010; Whitehead et al 2015). There are both important risks and benefits for plants with more specialised pollinators.

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