‘Pollination syndromes’, where convergent floral signals reflect selection from a functional pollinator group, are often characterized by physical features, yet floral rewards such as nectar may also reflect selection from pollinators. We asked whether nectar chemistry shows evidence of convergence across functional pollinator groups, i.e. a ‘chemical pollination syndrome’. We used untargeted metabolomics to compare nectar and leaf chemical profiles across 19 bee‐ and bird‐syndrome species, focusing on Salvia spp. (Lamiaceae), selected to maximize switching events between pollination syndromes.We found that independently derived bird‐syndrome nectar showed convergence on nectar traits distinct from bee‐syndrome nectar, primarily driven by the composition and concentration of alkaloid profiles. We did not find evidence for ‘passive leaking’ of nectar compounds from leaves since metabolite abundances were uncorrelated across tissues and many nectar metabolites were not present in leaves. Nectar and leaf metabolomes were strongly decoupled from phylogenetic relationships within Salvia. These results suggest that functional pollinator groups may drive the evolution of floral reward chemistry, consistent with our ‘chemical pollination syndrome’ hypothesis and indicative of selection by pollinators, but we also consider alternative explanations. In addition, our results support the notion that nectar chemistry can be decoupled from that of other tissues.
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The genetic architecture of floral trait divergence between hummingbird‐ and self‐pollinated monkeyflower ( Mimulus ) species
Summary Pollination syndromes are a key component of flowering plant diversification, prompting questions about the architecture of single traits and genetic coordination among traits. Here, we investigate the genetics of extreme floral divergence between naturally hybridizing monkeyflowers,Mimulus parishii(self‐pollinated) andM. cardinalis(hummingbird‐pollinated).We mapped quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for 18 pigment, pollinator reward/handling, and dimensional traits in parallel sets of F2hybrids plus recombinant inbred lines and generated nearly isogenic lines (NILs) for two dimensional traits, pistil length and corolla size.Our multi‐population approach revealed a highly polygenic basis (n = 190 QTLs total) for pollination syndrome divergence, capturing minor QTLs even for pigment traits with leading major loci. There was significant QTL overlap within pigment and dimensional categories. Nectar volume QTLs clustered with those for floral dimensions, suggesting a partially shared module. The NILs refined two pistil length QTLs, only one of which has tightly correlated effects on other dimensional traits.An overall polygenic architecture of floral divergence is partially coordinated by genetic modules formed by linkage (pigments) and likely pleiotropy (dimensions plus nectar). This work illuminates pollinator syndrome diversification in a model radiation and generates a robust framework for molecular and ecological genomics.
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- PAR ID:
- 10571514
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- New Phytologist
- Volume:
- 245
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 0028-646X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: p. 2255-2267
- Size(s):
- p. 2255-2267
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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