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- Title
Plant–pollinator interactions along the pathway to paternity.
- Authors
Minnaar, Corneile; Anderson, Bruce; Jager, Marinus L de; Karron, Jeffrey D
- Abstract
Background The male fitness pathway, from pollen production to ovule fertilization, is thought to strongly influence reproductive trait evolution in animal-pollinated plants. This pathway is characterized by multiple avenues of pollen loss which may lead to reductions in male fitness. However, empirical data on the mechanistic processes leading to pollen loss during transport are limited, and we therefore lack a comprehensive understanding of how male fitness is influenced by each step in the pollination process. Scope This review assesses the history of studying male function in plants and identifies critical gaps in our understanding of the ecology and evolution of pollen transport. We explore male reproductive function along the steps of the pathway to paternity and discuss evolutionary options to overcome barriers to siring success. In particular, we present a newly emerging idea that bodies of pollinators function as a dynamic arena facilitating intense male–male competition, where pollen of rival males is constantly covered or displaced by competitors. This perspective extends the pollen-competitive arena beyond the confines of the stigma and style, and highlights the opportunity for important new breakthroughs in the study of male reproductive strategies and floral evolution.
- Subjects
POLLINATION; INSECT pollinators; PLANT fertilization; POLLINARIA; BUMBLEBEES
- Publication
Annals of Botany, 2019, Vol 123, Issue 2, p225
- ISSN
0305-7364
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/aob/mcy167