Many plant species employing food-deceptive pollination strategy show discrete or continuous floral polymorphism within their populations. Previous studies have suggested that negative frequency-dependent selection (NFDS) caused by learning behavior of pollinators was responsible for maintenance of floral polymorphism. However, NFDS alone does not explain why and when discrete or continuous polymorphism evolves. In this study, we use an evolutionary simulation model to propose that inaccurate discrimination of flower colors by pollinators results in evolution of discrete flower color polymorphism. Simulations showed that associative learning based on inaccurate discrimination in pollinators caused disruptive selection of flower colors. The ...
Reinforcement is the process by which increased reproductive isolation between incipient species evo...
Many non-rewarding orchid species mimic the signals of co-occurring food flowers and thereby attract...
A long-standing question in evolutionary biology asks whether the genetic changes contributing to ph...
Many plant species employing food-deceptive pollination strategy show discrete or continuous floral ...
Intraspecific variation in flower color is often attributed to pollinator-mediated selection, yet th...
1. Many of the 'adaptive' traits in angiosperm flowers occur only in some species within a clade. On...
Pollinator-driven selection is thought to drive much of the extraordinary diversity of flowering pla...
Variation in flower color, particularly polymorphism, in which two or more different flower color ph...
1. Flower colour differs dramatically between populations for some plant species, yet we know little...
Diversity of flower traits is often proposed as the outcome of selection exerted by pollinators. Pos...
Character displacement is a potentially important process driving trait evolution and species divers...
The orchid Dactylorhiza sambucina shows a stable and dramatic flower-color polymorphism, with both y...
Contrasting flower color patterns that putatively attract or direct pollinators towards a reward are...
Plant-pollinator interactions are believed to play a major role in the evolution of floral traits. F...
Reinforcement is the process by which increased reproductive isolation between incipient species evo...
Many non-rewarding orchid species mimic the signals of co-occurring food flowers and thereby attract...
A long-standing question in evolutionary biology asks whether the genetic changes contributing to ph...
Many plant species employing food-deceptive pollination strategy show discrete or continuous floral ...
Intraspecific variation in flower color is often attributed to pollinator-mediated selection, yet th...
1. Many of the 'adaptive' traits in angiosperm flowers occur only in some species within a clade. On...
Pollinator-driven selection is thought to drive much of the extraordinary diversity of flowering pla...
Variation in flower color, particularly polymorphism, in which two or more different flower color ph...
1. Flower colour differs dramatically between populations for some plant species, yet we know little...
Diversity of flower traits is often proposed as the outcome of selection exerted by pollinators. Pos...
Character displacement is a potentially important process driving trait evolution and species divers...
The orchid Dactylorhiza sambucina shows a stable and dramatic flower-color polymorphism, with both y...
Contrasting flower color patterns that putatively attract or direct pollinators towards a reward are...
Plant-pollinator interactions are believed to play a major role in the evolution of floral traits. F...
Reinforcement is the process by which increased reproductive isolation between incipient species evo...
Many non-rewarding orchid species mimic the signals of co-occurring food flowers and thereby attract...
A long-standing question in evolutionary biology asks whether the genetic changes contributing to ph...