Mimicry involves adaptive resemblance between a mimic and a model. However, despite much recent research, it remains contentious in plants. Here, we review recent progress on studying deception by flowers, distinguishing between plants relying on mimicry to achieve pollination and those relying on the exploitation of the perceptual biases of animals. We disclose fundamental differences between both mechanisms and explain why the evolution of exploitation is less constrained than that of mimicry. Exploitation of perceptual biases might thus be a precursor for the gradual evolution of mimicry. Increasing knowledge on the sensory and cognitive filters in animals, and on the selective pressures that maintain them, should aid researchers in trac...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Experimental manipulations of floral nectar in food deceptive species can r...
Numerous studies have identified traits associated with anther mimicry, however, the processes under...
A standing enigma in pollination ecology is the evolution of pollinator attraction without offering ...
1. Based upon similarity in visual or olfactory appearances, recent studies concluded that mimicry o...
The orchid family is renowned for its enormous diversity of pollination mechanisms and unusually hig...
Chemical mimicry is an essential part of certain interspecific interactions, where the outcome for b...
Model-mimic plant systems are well known. However, the conditions promoting the existence of such sy...
Receiver bias in plant–animal interactions is here defined as “selection mediated by behavioral resp...
Pollination by sexual deception is arguably one of the most unusual liaisons linking plants and inse...
Aggressive mimicry occurs when an organism resembles some aspect of another organism (the model) in ...
Pollination is often regarded as a mutualistic relationship between flowering plants and insects. In...
Mutualisms involve cooperation, but also frequently involve conflict. Plant-pollinator mutualisms ar...
BACKGROUND:Experimental manipulations of floral nectar in food deceptive species can reveal insights...
Cases of imperfect or non-model mimicry are common in plants and animals and challenge intuitive ass...
The costs that species suffer when deceived are expected to drive learned resistance, although this ...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Experimental manipulations of floral nectar in food deceptive species can r...
Numerous studies have identified traits associated with anther mimicry, however, the processes under...
A standing enigma in pollination ecology is the evolution of pollinator attraction without offering ...
1. Based upon similarity in visual or olfactory appearances, recent studies concluded that mimicry o...
The orchid family is renowned for its enormous diversity of pollination mechanisms and unusually hig...
Chemical mimicry is an essential part of certain interspecific interactions, where the outcome for b...
Model-mimic plant systems are well known. However, the conditions promoting the existence of such sy...
Receiver bias in plant–animal interactions is here defined as “selection mediated by behavioral resp...
Pollination by sexual deception is arguably one of the most unusual liaisons linking plants and inse...
Aggressive mimicry occurs when an organism resembles some aspect of another organism (the model) in ...
Pollination is often regarded as a mutualistic relationship between flowering plants and insects. In...
Mutualisms involve cooperation, but also frequently involve conflict. Plant-pollinator mutualisms ar...
BACKGROUND:Experimental manipulations of floral nectar in food deceptive species can reveal insights...
Cases of imperfect or non-model mimicry are common in plants and animals and challenge intuitive ass...
The costs that species suffer when deceived are expected to drive learned resistance, although this ...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Experimental manipulations of floral nectar in food deceptive species can r...
Numerous studies have identified traits associated with anther mimicry, however, the processes under...
A standing enigma in pollination ecology is the evolution of pollinator attraction without offering ...