Abstract
Pollinator foraging behavior has direct consequences for plant reproduction and has been implicated in driving floral trait evolution. Exploring the degree to which pollinators exhibit flexibility in foraging behavior will add to a mechanistic understanding of how pollinators can impose selection on plant traits. Although plants have evolved suites of floral traits to attract pollinators, flower color is a particularly important aspect of the floral display. Some pollinators show strong innate color preference, but many pollinators display flexibility in preference due to learning associations between rewards and color, or due to variable perception of color in different environments or plant communities. This study examines the flexibility in flower color preference of two groups of native butterfly pollinators under natural field conditions. We find that pipevine swallowtails (Battus philenor) and skippers (family Hesperiidae), the predominate pollinators of the two native Texas Phlox species, Phlox cuspidata and Phlox drummondii, display distinct patterns of color preferences across different contexts. Pipevine swallowtails exhibit highly flexible color preferences and likely utilize other floral traits to make foraging decisions. In contrast, skippers have consistent color preferences and likely use flower color as a primary cue for foraging. As a result of this variation in color preference flexibility, the two pollinator groups impose concordant selection on flower color in some contexts but discordant selection in other contexts. This variability could have profound implications for how flower traits respond to pollinator‐mediated selection. Our findings suggest that studying dynamics of behavior in natural field conditions is important for understanding plant–pollinator interactions.
Highlights
Plants solicit pollinator visitation through a variety of floral display traits including color, scent, size, and shape (Schiestl & Johnson, 2013)
Our experiment explores flower color preference across the following three distinct floral contexts: (a) within-species color preference (WS), preference for light-blue P. drummondii compared to P. drummondii of the other three colors; (b) between-species color preference (BS), preference for light-blue P. cuspidata compared to P. drummondii of the other three colors; and (c) community context (CC), preference for light-blue P. drummondii compared to the other three P. drummondii colors with P. cuspidata present in the array
We found that two groups of generalist pollinators, pipevine swallowtails and skippers, vary in the consistency of their color preference while foraging in a natural field experiment
Summary
Plants solicit pollinator visitation through a variety of floral display traits including color, scent, size, and shape (Schiestl & Johnson, 2013). Strength and direction of preference for a certain flower color can depend on the presence or absence of scent signals (Knauer & Schiestl, 2016; Leonard & Masek, 2014; Russell, Newman, & Papaj, 2016; Yoshida, Itoh, Ômura, Arikawa, & Kinoshita, 2015) For these reasons, it is likely that pollinators in nature display extensive flexibility in floral color preference across plant species and in different communities; and yet, the extent of this flexibility is largely unknown. Wild lepidopterans are well suited to investigating flexibility in color preference in a natural field setting because they are important but understudied pollinators (Rader et al, 2016) They exhibit variation in visual systems across families and even species, which could translate to differential selection pressures on flower color (and other traits) within a given community of co-occurring pollinators and plants (Briscoe, 2008; Stavenga & Arikawa, 2006). Our experiment explores flower color preference across the following three distinct floral contexts: (a) within-species color preference (WS), preference for light-blue P. drummondii compared to P. drummondii of the other three colors; (b) between-species color preference (BS), preference for light-blue P. cuspidata compared to P. drummondii of the other three colors; and (c) community context (CC), preference for light-blue P. drummondii compared to the other three P. drummondii colors with P. cuspidata present in the array
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