Pollination mode and reproductive system of Sanguisorba minor and Sanguisorba officinalis

Author:

Abrahamczyk Stefan12ORCID,Struck Jan‐Hendrik2,Weigend Maximilian2

Affiliation:

1. State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart Botany Department Stuttgart Germany

2. Nees Institute for Biodiversity of Plant University of Bonn Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractReproductive systems and pollination modes (pollination by animals vs. wind) can switch within clades, and many species with an intermediate pollination mode (ambophily, pollination by animals and wind) exist. Here, we investigate the reproductive systems and pollination modes of two common Eurasian species from the Agrimonieae (Rosaceae) that occur in open habitats, Sanguisorba minor and Sanguisorba officinalis. Based on observations from literature, the flowers of both species are visited by insects, but due to flower morphology S. minor is commonly regarded as wind pollinated, while S. officinalis is classified as insect pollinated. By measuring floral traits, such as pollen grain and ovule number per flower, observing flower visitors in natural habitats as well as in the botanical gardens and conducting pollination experiments we found that the reproductive systems and pollination modes of the two species differ: Sanguisorba minor is commonly but infrequently visited by short‐tongued insects but is nevertheless exclusively wind pollinated. However, in contrast to most other wind‐pollinated species, S. minor is highly self‐compatible and even able to set seeds by autogamous selfing. Sanguisorba officinalis, on the other hand, is largely insect pollinated, but wind also contributes to seed set (⁓17% after insect exclusion). This species is able to set seeds by geitonogmous selfing but seed set is higher by outcrossing than by selfing. Thus, our study demonstrates another example of a plant species with small, open flowers arranged in large inflorescences that can be shown to be ambophilous. Further, the study will help to reconstruct the complex evolution of pollination modes in Agrimonieae (Rosaceae).

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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