AI Article Synopsis

  • Perfume flowers produce strong scents to attract pollinators, mainly male euglossine bees, and these scents serve as their sole reward during mating rituals.
  • Over 1,000 species of perfume flowers evolved independently across 15 angiosperm families in the Neotropical region, with Cryptanthus being an exception that attracts bees without emitting a scent but does produce nectar.
  • Research identified copalol as the unique compound that triggers scent-gathering behavior in euglossine males, suggesting that the evolution of floral scents may shift pollinator preferences, indicating a more widespread role of semivolatile compounds in attracting these pollinators than previously recognized.

Article Abstract

Perfume flowers (sensu Vogel) produce intense scents that function both as attractants and as the sole rewards for pollinators. The scent is collected exclusively by male euglossine bees and used during pre-mating behavior. Perfume flowers have evolved independently in 15 angiosperm families, with over 1,000 reported species across the Neotropical region. Members of Cryptanthus (Bromeliaceae) represent a puzzling exception among perfume flowers, as flowers produce nectar and do not emit a noticeable scent yet still attract euglossine males. Here, we studied the pollination ecology of Cryptanthus burle-marxii and decode the chemical communication between its flowers and euglossine males. Field observations revealed euglossine males and hummingbirds as potential pollinators. The bees always contacted anthers/stigma of C. burle-marxii while scraping the petals to obtain chemicals, whereas nectar-seeking hummingbirds normally only contacted the anthers. Based on gas chromatography-mass spectrometry/nuclear magnetic resonance analyses of flower scent samples and bioassays, we identified the diterpene copalol as the only floral scent compound triggering scent-gathering behavior in euglossine males. Unlike euglossine-bee-mediated pollination, hummingbird pollination is ancestral in the Cryptanthus clade, suggesting a case of an ongoing pollinator shift mediated by the evolution of perfume as a reward. Copalol was previously unknown as a floral scent constituent and represents the heaviest and least-volatile compound known to attract euglossine males. Our study provides the first experimental evidence that semivolatile floral compounds can mediate euglossine bee interactions. Male euglossine pollination in other plant species lacking noticeable floral scents suggests that semivolatile-mediated pollinator attraction is more widespread than currently appreciated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.11.012DOI Listing

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