Beyond floricentrism: the pollination function of inflorescences

Mating by outcrossing plants depends on the frequency and quality of the interaction between pollen vectors and individual flowers. However, the historical focus of pollination biology on individual flowers (floricentrism) cannot produce a complete understanding of the role of pollination in plant m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPlant species biology Vol. 19; no. 3; pp. 137 - 148
Main Authors Harder, L.D, Jordan, C.Y, Gross, W.E, Routley, M.B
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melbourne, Australia Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.12.2004
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Summary:Mating by outcrossing plants depends on the frequency and quality of the interaction between pollen vectors and individual flowers. However, the historical focus of pollination biology on individual flowers (floricentrism) cannot produce a complete understanding of the role of pollination in plant mating because mating is an aggregate process, which depends on the reproductive outcomes of all of a plant’s flowers. Simultaneous display of multiple flowers in an inflorescence increases a plant’s attractiveness to pollinators, which should, in general, enhance mating opportunities. However, whenever pollinators visit multiple flowers on an inflorescence, self‐pollination among flowers can reduce the pollen available for export to other plants (pollen discounting) and can increase the incidence of inbreeding depression for embryos and offspring. Therefore, the size of floral displays that maximize mating frequency and quality generally balance the benefits of attractiveness against the costs of self‐pollination. This balance can shift considerably if different flowers serve female and male functions at one time (sexual segregation) and flowers are arranged in inflorescences so that pollinators visit female flowers before male flowers. However, the effectiveness of sexual segregation depends on the extent to which a particular inflorescence architecture induces consistent movement patterns by pollinators. In general, the consistency of pollinator movement patterns varies with inflorescence architecture and differs between pollinator types. Such variation creates many options for the evolution of the diverse inflorescence characteristics observed within angiosperms, which can be appreciated only by moving beyond a floricentric perspective of the role of pollination in plant mating.
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ISSN:0913-557X
1442-1984
DOI:10.1111/j.1442-1984.2004.00110.x