4.5 Article

Male-biased nectar production in a protandrous herb matches predictions of sexual selection theory in plants

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 94, Issue 4, Pages 674-682

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.94.4.674

Keywords

Chrysothemis friedrichsthaliana; Costa Rica; gesneriaceae; hummingbird pollination; nectar; Phaethornis striigilaris; pollinator-mediated selection; sexual selection

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Nectar production may disproportionately benefit male relative to female pollination success. In such cases, sexual selection is often suggested as the cause of asymmetric benefits, yet sexual selection in plants-particularly plants with hermaphroditic flowers-is infrequently tested empirically. Here, I used a protandrous herb with male-biased nectar production (Chrysothenlis friediichsthaliana. Gesneriaceae) to test predictions from sexual selection theory. During three flowering seasons, I measured nectar production, pollinator visits. and male and female fecundity following different numbers of cross-pollination events. In accordance with sexual selection predictions, (I) nectar production was greater during the male phase by at least 65%; (2) visits by the main pollinator (hummingbird Phaethornis striigularis) were limiting for part of the season, indicating that plants had to compete for pollinator visits-, (3) pollinators spent 53% more time per visit and made 86% more visits to male- vs. female-phase flowers, suggesting that nectar increased male more than female pollination success: and (4) female fecundity was maximized by one visit. whereas male fecundity continued to increase with additional visits. Autonomous self-pollination further reduced visit requirements for maximum female seed set. These findings match specific sexual selection predictions: they link an observable I male bias in a secondary sexual trait (nectar) to positive responses of mating participants (pollinators), resulting in more mating opportunities for mate-limited males, relative to apparently resource-limited females. This field-testing of theoretical predictions provides unique evidence that sexual selection helps maintain nectar production patterns in this and, quite likely. other hermaphroditic plant species.

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