Abstract

Sarcotheca celebica is a tree endemic lo Sulawesi (and Kabaena Island). Kike many species in the Oxalidaceae it is heterostylous (here distylous). The small red flowers, which last less than one day, are produced in loose inflorescences which bloom over a long flowering season (several months). There are two whorls of stamens in each plant, which overlap in length, perhaps indicating a tristylous origin. Long–styled and short–styled plants differed in the measurements of stamens, styles and pollen grains. Only a small amount of pollen was produced by long–styled plants. Effective insect pollinators were mainly large Hymenoptcra, especially Xylocopa species, which visited many flowers and different trees in rapid succession. A wide diversity of insects visited flowers of both morphs, and numbers visiting each morph were approximately equal. The only successful experimental pollinations were from pollen of short–styled plants onto stigmas of long–styled plants. Automatic self–pollination did not occur. In nature not all flowers produced fruit, some fruits were set with no seeds and a low number of seeds was set in all fruits. The differences in seed set per fruit between short–styled, long–styled and experimental crosses indicate that pollinator visits were insufficient for maximum seed set in some fruits, but selective abortion of seeds must also be occurring. We suggest that S. celebica may represent an intermediate stage in the evolution of dioecy from distyly, with the short–styled flowers making their major genetic contribution through pollen and long–styled flowers through ovules.

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