4.5 Article

Changes in pollinator fauna affect altitudinal variation of floral size in a bumblebee-pollinated herb

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 4, 期 17, 页码 3395-3407

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1191

关键词

Geographic selection mosaic; local adaptation; mechanical fit; phenotypic selection; pollination efficiency

资金

  1. Global Environmental Research Fund of the Ministry of the Environment, Japan [D-0904]
  2. Research and Education Funding for Japanese Alps Inter-Universities Cooperative Project, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Geographic trait variations are often caused by locally different selection regimes. As a steep environmental cline along altitude strongly influences adaptive traits, mountain ecosystems are ideal for exploring adaptive differentiation over short distances. We investigated altitudinal floral size variation of Campanula punctata var. hondoensis in 12 populations in three mountain regions of central Japan to test whether the altitudinal floral size variation was correlated with the size of the local bumblebee pollinator and to assess whether floral size was selected for by pollinator size. We found apparent geographic variations in pollinator assemblages along altitude, which consequently produced a geographic change in pollinator size. Similarly, we found altitudinal changes in floral size, which proved to be correlated with the local pollinator size, but not with altitude itself. Furthermore, pollen removal from flower styles onto bees (plant's male fitness) was strongly influenced by the size match between flower style length and pollinator mouthpart length. These results strongly suggest that C. punctata floral size is under pollinator-mediated selection and that a geographic mosaic of locally adapted C. punctata exists at fine spatial scale.

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