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Floral biology of North American Oenothera sect. Lavauxia (Onagraceae): Advertisements, rewards, and extreme variation in floral depth

Raguso, Robert A. ; Kelber, Almut LU ; Pfaff, Michael ; Levin, Rachel A. and McDade, Lucinda A. (2007) In Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 94(1). p.236-257
Abstract
We studied the floral biology of five North American members of Oenothera L. sect. Lavauxia (Spach) Endl. (Onagraceae L.) in field and common greenhouse settings. Oenothera sect. Lavauxia floral morphology ranges from small, cleistogamous flowers (O. flava subsp. flava (A. Nels.) Garrett in Garrett) to sonic of the longest-tubed flowers in North America (O. flava subsp. taraxacoides (Wooton & Standl.) W. L. Wagner). Our goal was to compare qualitative and quantitative aspects of floral advertisement and reward among taxa in section Lavauxia. All taxa are night-blooming and self-compatible, have yellow petals with ultraviolet reflectance, and produce floral scents dominated by nitrogenous compounds and monoterpenes. Methyl nicotinate is... (More)
We studied the floral biology of five North American members of Oenothera L. sect. Lavauxia (Spach) Endl. (Onagraceae L.) in field and common greenhouse settings. Oenothera sect. Lavauxia floral morphology ranges from small, cleistogamous flowers (O. flava subsp. flava (A. Nels.) Garrett in Garrett) to sonic of the longest-tubed flowers in North America (O. flava subsp. taraxacoides (Wooton & Standl.) W. L. Wagner). Our goal was to compare qualitative and quantitative aspects of floral advertisement and reward among taxa in section Lavauxia. All taxa are night-blooming and self-compatible, have yellow petals with ultraviolet reflectance, and produce floral scents dominated by nitrogenous compounds and monoterpenes. Methyl nicotinate is present in the fragrances of all taxa of section Lavauxia regardless of flower size or putative mating system. Because this floral volatile is largely absent from other Oenothera species, we hypothesize that it is a synapomorphy for section Lavauxia. The rare O. acutissima W. L. Wagner, which is endemic to the Uintah Mountains, is polymorphic for odors dominated by linalool- or ocimene-derived compounds). Field observations in its type locality in northeastern Utah, U.S.A., revealed frequent floral visitation by crepuscular hawkmoths during the first 1.5 hours after anthesis, a pattern common to O. flava subsp. taraxacoides and other large-flowered Oenothera throughout western North America. Quantitative aspects of floral advertisement (flower size, scent emission) and reward (nectar volume) are dramatically reduced in putatively autogamous taxa (O. flava subsp. flava, O. triloba Nutt.). whereas qualitative aspects (flower color, scent, and nectar chemistry) remain comparable. All taxa could be distinguished through ordination of characters related to flower size, herkogamy. and scent chemistry. Extreme nectar tube length variation across the range of O. flava renders this an excellent model system for measuring the costs and mechanisms of shifts between outcrossing and autogamy. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
biogeography, fragrance. nectar, night-blooming, Onagraceae, Oenothera, floral scent, pollination
in
Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
volume
94
issue
1
pages
236 - 257
publisher
Missouri Botanical Garden
external identifiers
  • wos:000246230000007
  • scopus:34248532769
ISSN
0026-6493
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5f6be3af-595f-4aa0-9d65-0b6855a1d286 (old id 662806)
alternative location
http://apt.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-toc&issn=0026-6493&volume=94&issue=1
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:55:04
date last changed
2024-05-11 10:46:03
@article{5f6be3af-595f-4aa0-9d65-0b6855a1d286,
  abstract     = {{We studied the floral biology of five North American members of Oenothera L. sect. Lavauxia (Spach) Endl. (Onagraceae L.) in field and common greenhouse settings. Oenothera sect. Lavauxia floral morphology ranges from small, cleistogamous flowers (O. flava subsp. flava (A. Nels.) Garrett in Garrett) to sonic of the longest-tubed flowers in North America (O. flava subsp. taraxacoides (Wooton & Standl.) W. L. Wagner). Our goal was to compare qualitative and quantitative aspects of floral advertisement and reward among taxa in section Lavauxia. All taxa are night-blooming and self-compatible, have yellow petals with ultraviolet reflectance, and produce floral scents dominated by nitrogenous compounds and monoterpenes. Methyl nicotinate is present in the fragrances of all taxa of section Lavauxia regardless of flower size or putative mating system. Because this floral volatile is largely absent from other Oenothera species, we hypothesize that it is a synapomorphy for section Lavauxia. The rare O. acutissima W. L. Wagner, which is endemic to the Uintah Mountains, is polymorphic for odors dominated by linalool- or ocimene-derived compounds). Field observations in its type locality in northeastern Utah, U.S.A., revealed frequent floral visitation by crepuscular hawkmoths during the first 1.5 hours after anthesis, a pattern common to O. flava subsp. taraxacoides and other large-flowered Oenothera throughout western North America. Quantitative aspects of floral advertisement (flower size, scent emission) and reward (nectar volume) are dramatically reduced in putatively autogamous taxa (O. flava subsp. flava, O. triloba Nutt.). whereas qualitative aspects (flower color, scent, and nectar chemistry) remain comparable. All taxa could be distinguished through ordination of characters related to flower size, herkogamy. and scent chemistry. Extreme nectar tube length variation across the range of O. flava renders this an excellent model system for measuring the costs and mechanisms of shifts between outcrossing and autogamy.}},
  author       = {{Raguso, Robert A. and Kelber, Almut and Pfaff, Michael and Levin, Rachel A. and McDade, Lucinda A.}},
  issn         = {{0026-6493}},
  keywords     = {{biogeography; fragrance. nectar; night-blooming; Onagraceae; Oenothera; floral scent; pollination}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{236--257}},
  publisher    = {{Missouri Botanical Garden}},
  series       = {{Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden}},
  title        = {{Floral biology of North American Oenothera sect. Lavauxia (Onagraceae): Advertisements, rewards, and extreme variation in floral depth}},
  url          = {{http://apt.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-toc&issn=0026-6493&volume=94&issue=1}},
  volume       = {{94}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}