Mimicking orchids lure bees from afar with exaggerated ultraviolet signals

Author:

Scaccabarozzi Daniela12ORCID,Lunau Klaus3ORCID,Guzzetti Lorenzo4ORCID,Cozzolino Salvatore5ORCID,Dyer Adrian G.67ORCID,Tommasi Nicola4ORCID,Biella Paolo4ORCID,Galimberti Andrea4ORCID,Labra Massimo4ORCID,Bruni Ilaria4ORCID,Pattarini Giorgio8ORCID,Brundrett Mark9ORCID,Gagliano Monica1011ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology Tianjin University Tianjin China

2. School of Molecular and Life Sciences Curtin University Bentley Western Australia Australia

3. Institute of Sensory Ecology Heinrich‐Heine University Düsseldorf Düsseldorf Germany

4. ZooPlantLab, Dipartimento di Biotecnologie e Bioscienze University of Milano – Bicocca Milan Italy

5. Department of Biology University of Naples Federico II Naples Italy

6. Bio‐Inspired Digital Sensing Lab, School of Media and Communication RMIT University Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Department of Physiology and Neuroscience Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

8. Department of Mathematics and Physics University of Stavanger Stavanger Norway

9. School of Biological Sciences University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

10. Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, Faculty of Sciences & Engineering Southern Cross University Lismore New South Wales Australia

11. Sydney Environment Institute (SEI) The University of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractFlowers have many traits to appeal to pollinators, including ultraviolet (UV) absorbing markings, which are well‐known for attracting bees at close proximity (e.g., <1 m). While striking UV signals have been thought to attract pollinators also from far away, if these signals impact the plant pollinia removal over distance remains unknown. Here, we report the case of the Australian orchid Diuris brumalis, a nonrewarding species, pollinated by bees via mimicry of the rewarding pea plant Daviesia decurrens. When distant from the pea plant, Diuris was hypothesized to enhance pollinator attraction by exaggeratedly mimicking the floral ultraviolet (UV) reflecting patterns of its model. By experimentally modulating floral UV reflectance with a UV screening solution, we quantified the orchid pollinia removal at a variable distance from the model pea plants. We demonstrate that the deceptive orchid Diuris attracts bee pollinators by emphasizing the visual stimuli, which mimic the floral UV signaling of the rewarding model Daviesia. Moreover, the exaggerated UV reflectance of Diuris flowers impacted pollinators' visitation at an optimal distance from Da. decurrens, and the effect decreased when orchids were too close or too far away from the model. Our findings support the hypothesis that salient UV flower signaling plays a functional role in visual floral mimicry, likely exploiting perceptual gaps in bee neural coding, and mediates the plant pollinia removal at much greater spatial scales than previously expected. The ruse works most effectively at an optimal distance of several meters revealing the importance of salient visual stimuli when mimicry is imperfect.

Funder

Australian Orchid Foundation

Curtin University of Technology

Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II

Templeton World Charity Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference76 articles.

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5. Untersuchungen zur Ultraviolettreflexion von Angiospermenblüten III. Dilleniidae und Asteridae;Burr B.;Tropische und Subtropische Pflanzenwelt,1995

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