3D pollination biology using micro‐computed tomography and geometric morphometrics in Theobroma cacao

Author:

Wolcott Katherine A.1ORCID,Stanley Edward L.2ORCID,Gutierrez Osman A.3ORCID,Wuchty Stefan1456ORCID,Whitlock Barbara Ann1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of Miami Coral Gables Florida 33124 USA

2. Department of Natural History Florida Museum of Natural History Gainesville Florida USA

3. Subtropical Horticultural Research Station United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service (USDA‐ARS) Miami Florida 33158 USA

4. Department of Computer Science University of Miami Coral Gables Florida 33146 USA

5. Institute of Data Science and Computing University of Miami Coral Gables Florida 33146 USA

6. Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Miami Miami Florida 33136 USA

Abstract

AbstractPremiseImaging technologies that capture three‐dimensional (3D) variation in floral morphology at micro‐ and nano‐resolutions are increasingly accessible. In herkogamous flowers, such as those of Theobroma cacao, structural barriers between anthers and stigmas represent bottlenecks that restrict pollinator size and access to reproductive organs. To study the unresolved pollination biology of cacao, we present a novel application of micro‐computed tomography (micro‐CT) using floral dimensions to quantify pollinator functional size limits.MethodsWe generated micro‐CT data sets from field‐collected flowers and museum specimens of potential pollinators. To compare floral variation, we used 3D Slicer to place landmarks on the surface models and performed a geometric morphometric (GMM) analysis using geomorph R. We identified the petal side door (an opening between the petal hoods and filament) as the main bottleneck for pollinator access. We compared its mean dimensions with proposed pollinators to identify viable candidates.ResultsWe identified three levels of likelihood for putative pollinators based on the number of morphological (body) dimensions that fit through the petal side door. We also found floral reward microstructures whose presence and location were previously unclear.DiscussionUsing micro‐CT and GMM to study the 3D pollination biology of cacao provides new evidence for predicting unknown pollinators. Incorporating geometry and floral rewards will strengthen plant–pollinator trait matching models for cacao and other species.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Advances in plant imaging across scales;Applications in Plant Sciences;2023-09

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