Florivory of Early Cretaceous flowers by functionally diverse insects: implications for early angiosperm pollination

Author:

Xiao Lifang12ORCID,Labandeira Conrad123ORCID,Dilcher David4ORCID,Ren Dong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Science and Academy for Multidisciplinary Studies, Capital Normal University, Beijing, People's Republic of China

2. Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Tenth Street and Constitution Avenue, Washington, DC, USA

3. Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA

4. Department of Geology, Indiana University, 1001 Tenth Street, Bloomington, IN, USA

Abstract

Florivory (flower consumption) occurs worldwide in modern angiosperms, associated with pollen and nectar consumption. However, florivory remains unrecorded from fossil flowers since their Early Cretaceous appearance. We test hypotheses that earliest angiosperms were pollinated by a diverse insect fauna by evaluating 7858 plants from eight localities of the latest Albian Dakota Formation from midcontinental North America, in which 645 specimens (8.2%) were flowers or inflorescences. Well-preserved specimens were categorized into 32 morphotypes, nine of which displayed 207 instances of damage from 11 insect damage types (DTs) by four functional-feeding groups of hole feeding, margin feeding, surface feeding and piercing-and-sucking. We assessed the same DTs inflicted by known florivores on modern flowers that also are their pollinators, and associated insect mouthpart types causing such damage. The diverse, Dakota florivore–pollinator community showed a local pattern at Braun's Ranch of flower morphotypes 4 and 5 having piercing-and-sucking as dominant and margin feeding as minor interactions, whereas Dakotanthus cordiformis at Rose Creek I and II had an opposite pattern. We found no evidence for nectar robbing. These data support the rapid emergence of early angiosperms of florivore and associated pollinator guilds expressed at both the local and regional community levels.

Funder

Project of High-level Teachers in Beijing Municipal Universities in the Period of 13th Five-year Plan

National Science Foundation of United States

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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