237
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Ambophily in Olea ferruginea: a transitional state in the pollination syndrome

, &
Pages 221-232 | Received 26 Oct 2021, Accepted 07 Jul 2022, Published online: 22 Jul 2022

References

  • Ackerman JD. 2000. Abiotic pollen and pollination: ecological functional and evolutionary perspectives. Pl Syst Evol. 222(1–4):167–185.
  • Arteaga MA, González G, Delgado JD, Arévalo JR, Fernández Palacios JM. 2006. Offspring spatial patterns in Picconia excelsa (Oleaceae) in the Canarian laurel forest. Flora. 201(8):642–651.
  • Benjamini Y, Hochberg Y. 1995. Controlling the false discovery rate: A practical and powerful approach to multiple testing. J Royal Stat Soc Series B. (Meth.). 57(1):289–300.
  • Berry PE, Calvo RN. 1989. Wind pollination, self-incompatibility, and altitudinal shifts in pollination systems in the high Andean genus Espeletia (Asteraceae). Am J Bot. 76(11):1602–1614.
  • Besnard G, Cheptou P-O, Debbaoui M, Lafont P, Hugueny B, Dupin J, Baali-Cherif D. 2020. Paternity tests support a diallelic self-incompatibility system in a wild olive (Olea europaea subsp. laperrinei, Oleaceae). Ecol Evol. 10(4):1876–1888.
  • Billiard S, Husse L, Lepercq P, Gode C, Bourceaux A, Lepart J, Vernet P, Saumitou-Laprade P. 2015. Selfish male-determining element favors the transition from hermaphroditism to androdioecy. Evolution. 69(3):683–693.
  • Bingham RA, Orthner AR. 1998. Efficient pollination of alpine plants. Nature. 391(6664):238–239.
  • Bonser SP. 2013. High reproductive efficiency as an adaptive strategy in competitive environments. Funct Ecol. 27(4):876–885.
  • Butz Huryn VM, Moller H. 1995. An assessment of the contribution of honey bees (Apis mellifera) to weed reproduction in New Zealand protected areas. New Zealand J Ecol. 19(2):111–122.
  • Clark SJ. 2010. Individuals and the variation needed for high species diversity in forest trees. Science. 327(5969):1129–1132.
  • Cox PA. 1991. Abiotic pollination: an evolutionary escape for animal-pollinated angiosperms. Philos Trans R Soc Lond Ser B. 333(1267):217–224.
  • Cuevas J, Polito VS. 2004. The role of staminate flowers in the breeding system of Olea europaea (Oleaceae): an andromonocious, wind pollinated taxon. Ann Bot. 93(5):547–553.
  • Culley TM, Weller SG, Sakai AK. 2002. The evolution of wind pollination in angiosperms. Trends Ecol Evol. 17(8):361–369.
  • Dafni A, Dukas R. 1986. Insect and wind pollination in Urginea maritima (Liliaceae). Pl Syst Evol. 154(1–2):1–10.
  • Dafni A, Jurgens A, Dorchin A. 2012. Ambophily and supergeneralism in Ceratonia siliqua pollination. In: Patiny S, editor. Evolution of plant-pollinator relationships. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • De Cauwer I, Vernet P, Billiard S, Godé C, Bourceaux A, Ponitzki C, Saumitou-Laprade P. 2021. Widespread coexistence of self-compatible and self-incompatible phenotypes in a diallelic self-incompatibility system in Ligustrum vulgare (Oleaceae). Heredity. 127(4):384–392.
  • De Figueiredo RA, Sazima M. 2000. Pollination biology of Piperaceae species in southeastern Brazil. Ann Bot. 85(4):455–460.
  • Díaz A, Martín A, Rallo P, Barranco D, De la Rosa R. 2006. Self-incompatibility of ‘Arbequina’ and ‘Picual’ olive Assessed by SSR Markers. jashs. 131(2):250–255.
  • Duan Y, Li W, Zheng S, Sylvester SP, Li Y, Cai F, Zhang C, Wang X. 2019. Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae). PLoS One. 14(9):e0221898.
  • Dyer C. 1991. A biosystematic study of the African species of Olea L. (Oleaceae) [dissertation]. Johannesburg, South Africa: University of the Witwatersrand.
  • Fabbri BG, Lambardi M, Kailis SG. 2004. Olive propagation manual. Collingwood (VIC): Landlinks.
  • Faegri K, van der Pijl L. 1979. The principles of pollination ecology. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
  • Fernandez-Escobar R, Ortiz-Urquiza A, Prado M, Rapoport HF. 2008. Nitrogen status influence on olive tree flower quality and ovule longevity. Environ Exp Bot. 64(2):113–119.
  • Fiala B, Meyer U, Hashim R, Maschwitz U. 2011. Pollination systems in pioneer trees of the genus Macaranga (Euphorbiaceae) in Malaysian rainforests. Biol J Lin Soc. 103(4):935–953.
  • Free JB. 1993. Insect pollination of crops. London: Academic Press.
  • Friedman J, Barrett SCH. 2009. Wind of change: new insights on the ecology and evolution of pollination and mating in wind-pollinated plants. Ann Bot. 103(9):1515–1527.
  • Funderburk J, Stavisky J, Olson S. 2000. Predation of Frankliniella occidentalis (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) in field pepper by Orius insidiosus (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae). Environ Entomol. 29(2):376–382.
  • Gomez JM, Zamora R. 1996. Wind pollination in highmountain populations of Hormathophylla spinosa (Cruciferae). Am J Bot. 83(5):580–585.
  • Gong YB, Yang M, Vamosi JC, Yang HM, Mu WX, Li JK, Wan T. 2016. Wind or insect pollination? Ambophily in a subtropical gymnosperm Gnetum parvifolium (Gnetales). Plant Species Biol. 31(4):272–279.
  • González-Varo JP. 2009. Effects of fragmentation on pollinator assemblage, pollen limitation and seed production of Mediterranean myrtle (Myrtus communis). Biol Conserv. 142(5):1058–1065.
  • Goodwillie C. 1999. Wind pollination and reproductive assurance in Linanthus parviflorus (Polemoniaceae), a self-incompatible annual. Am J Bot. 86(7):948–954.
  • Griggs WH, Hartmann HT, Bradley MV, Iwakiri BT, Whistler JE. 1975. Olive pollination in California. Calif Agric Exp Sta Bull. 869(49):47.
  • Hegland SJ, Nielsen A, Lazaro A, Bjerknes AL, Totland Ø. 2009. How does climate warming affect plant pollinator interactions? Ecol Lett. 12(2):184–195.
  • Hesse E, Pannell JR. 2011. Density-dependent pollen limitation and reproductive assurance in a wind-pollinated herb with contrasting sexual systems. J Ecol. 99(6):1531–1539.
  • Ishida K, Hiura T. 1994. Reproductive ecology in Fraxinus lanuginosa (II), pollen vector. Trans Hokkaido Br Jpn for Soc. 42:61–63.
  • Ishida K, Hiura T. 2002. Mating system and population genetic structure of an androdioecious tree, Fraxinus lanuginosa Koidz. (Oleaceae) in northern Japan. Heredity. 88(4):296–301.
  • Karrenberg S, Kollmann J, Edwards P. 2002. Pollen vectors and inflorescence morphology in four species of Salix. Plant Syst Evol. 235(1):181–188.
  • Kearns CA, Inouye DW, Waser NM. 1998. Endangered mutualism: the conservation of plant–pollinator interaction. Annu Rev Ecol Syst. 29(1):83–112.
  • Khan S, Kumari P, Wani IA, Verma S. 2021. Pollination biology and breeding system in Vitex negundo L. (Lamiaceae), an important medicinal plant. Int J Plant Reprod Biol. 13(1):77–82.
  • Kim YS, Maunder M. 1998. Plants in peril, 24 Abeliophyllum distichum. Curtis’s Botanical Magazine. 15(2):141–146.
  • Klecka J, Hadrava J, Biella P, Akter A. 2018. Flower visitation by hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) in a temperate plant-pollinator network. PeerJ. 6:e6025.
  • Koubouris GC, Breton CM, Metzidakis IT, Vasilakakis MD. 2014. Self-incompatibility and pollination relationships for four Greek olive cultivars. Sci Hort. 176:91–96.
  • Koubouris GC, Metzidakis IT, Vasilakakis MD. 2010. Influence of cross-pollination on the development of parthenocarpic olive (Olea europaea) fruits (shotberries). Ex Agric. 46(1):67–76.
  • Lavee S. 1985. Olea europaea. In: Halevy AH, editor. Handbook of flowering. Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press; p. 423–434.
  • Levin DA, Kerster HW. 1974. Gene flowing seed plants. Evol Biol. 7:139–220.
  • Li J, Bogle AL, Donoghue MJ. 1999. Phylogenetic relationships in the Hamamelidoideae inferred from sequences of TRN non-coding regions of chloroplast DNA. Harvard Papers in Bot. 4(1):343–356.
  • Li P, Luo YB, Bernhardt P, Yang XQ, Kou Y. 2006. Deceptive pollination of the lady’s slipper Cypripedium tibeticum (Orchidaceae). Plant Syst Evol. 262(1–2):53–63.
  • Listabarth C. 1993. Insect-induced wind pollination of the palm Chamaedorea pinnatifrons and pollination in the related Wendlandiella sp. Biodivers Conserv. 2(1):39–50.
  • Lock JM, Hall JB. 1982. Floral biology of Mallotus oppositifolius (Euphorbiaceae). Biotropica. 14(2):153–155.
  • Mangla Y, Tandon R. 2011. Insects facilitate wind pollination in pollen-limited Crateva adansonii (Capparaceae). Aust J Bot. 59(1):61–69.
  • Mensah BA, Kudom AA. 2011. Foraging dynamics and pollination efficiency of Apis mellifera and Xylocopa olivacea on Luffa aegyptiaca (Cucurbitaceae) in Southern Ghana. J Pollinat Ecol. 4(5):34–38.
  • Moog U, Fiala B, Federle W, Maschwitz U. 2002. Thrips pollination of the dioecious ant plant Macaranga hullettii (Euphorbiaceae) in Southeast Asia. Am J Bot. 89(1):50–59.
  • Nepi M, Grasso DA, Mancuso S. 2018. Nectar in plant–insect mutualistic relationships: From food reward to partner manipulation. Front Plant Sci. 9(1063):1063.
  • Niklas KJ. 1987. Pollen capture and wind-induced movement of compact and diffuse grass panicles: implications for pollination efficiency. Am J Bot. 74(1):74–89.
  • Orlandi F, Fornaciari M, Romano B. 2002. The use of phenological data to calculate chilling units in Olea europaea L. in relation to the onset of reproduction. Int J Biometeorol. 46(1):2–8.
  • Osekre EA, Wright DL, Marois JJ, Mailhot DJ. 2008. Predator-Prey Interactions Between Orius insidiosus (Heteroptera: Anthocoridae) and Frankliniella tritici (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) in Cotton Blooms. J Cott Sci. 12:195–201.
  • Pando JB, Tchuenguem FN, Tamesse JL. 2011. Foraging and pollination behaviour of Xylocopacalens lepeletier (Hymenoptera: Apidae) on Phaseolus coccineus L. (Fabaceae) flowers at Yaounde (Cameroon). Entomol Res. 41(5):185–193.
  • Proctor M, Yeo P, Lack A. 1996. The natural history of pollination. Portland (OR): Timber Press.
  • Qu R, Li X, Luo Y, Dong M, Xu H, Chen X, Dafni A. 2007. Wind dragged corolla enhances self-pollination: a new mechanism of delayed self pollination. Ann Bot. 100(6):1155–1164.
  • R Core Team. 2020. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. https://cran.r-project.org/.
  • Raju AJS. 1988. Pollination ecology of Jasminum angustifolium Vahl. (Oleaceae). Proc Indian Natl Sci Acad. 54:165–169.
  • Regal PJ. 1982. Pollination by wind and animals: ecology of geographic patterns. Annu Rev Ecol Syst. 13(1):497–524.
  • Richards AJ. 1986. Plant breeding system. London, UK: George Allen and Unwin.
  • Rodríguez-Castillo E, Díaz A, Belaj A, De la R. 2009. Inter-compatibility relationships in olive as revealed by paternity tests with SSR markers. Acta Hortic. 814(814):659–662.
  • Rohwer JG. 1995. From flower to fruit in Noronhia emarginata (Lam.) Thouars (Oleaceae). Flora. 190(1):35–43.
  • Sacchi CF, Price PW. 1988. Pollination of the Arroyo willow, Salix lasiolepis: role of insects and wind. Am J Bot. 75(9):1387–1393.
  • Sarma K, Tandon R, Shivanna KR, Mohan Ram HY. 2007. Snail-pollination in Volvulopsis nummularium. Curr Sci. 93(6):826–831.
  • Saumitou-Laprade P, Vernet P, Dowkiw A, Bertrand S, Billiard S, Albert B, Gouyon PH, Dufay, M. 2018. Polygamy or subdioecy? The impact of diallelic self incompatibility on the sexual system in Fraxinus excelsior (Oleaceae). Proc R Soc B. 285(1873):20180004.
  • Saumitou-Laprade P, Vernet P, Vassiliadis C, Hoareau Y, De MG, Dommée B, Lepart J. 2010. A self-incompatibility system explains high male frequencies in an androdioecious. Plant Sci. 327(5973):1648–1650.
  • Saumitou-Laprade P, Vernet P, Vekemans X, Billiard S, Gallina S, Essalouh L, Mhaïs A, Moukhli A, El Bakkali A, Barcaccia G, et al. 2017. Elucidation of the genetic architecture of self-incompatibility in olive: evolutionary consequences and perspectives for orchard management. Evol Appl. 10(9):867–880.
  • Saunders ME. 2018. Insect pollinators collect pollen from wind-pollinated plants: implications for pollination ecology and sustainable agriculture. Insect Conserv Divers. 11(1):13–31.
  • Seifi E, Guerin J, Kaiser B, Sedgley M. 2011. Sexual compatibility and floral biology of some Olive cultivars. New Zeal J Crop Hort. 39(2):141–151.
  • Serrano I, Suárez C, Olmedilla A, Rapoport HF, Rodríguez-García MI. 2008. Structural organization and cytochemical features of the pistil in Olive (L.) cv. Picual at anthesis. Sex Plant Reprod. 21(2):99–111.
  • Ssymank A, Gilbert F. 2008. Anemophilous pollen in the diet of Syrphid flies with special reference to the leaf feeding strategy occurring in Xylotini (Diptera, Syrphidae). Dtsch Entomol Z. 40(2):245–258.
  • Stellman P. 1984. The significance of biotic pollination in a nominally anemophilous plant: Plantago lanceolata. Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie Van Wetenschappen. Series C. Biol Med Scis. 87(1):95–119.
  • Steven JC, Waller DM. 2007. Isolation affects reproductive success in low density but not high-density populations of two wind-pollinated Thalictrum species. Plant Ecol. 190(1):131–141.
  • Talavera S, Bastida F, Ortiz PL, Arista M. 2001. Pollinator attendance and reproductive success in Cistus libanotis L. (Cistaceae). Int. J Plant Sci. 162(2):343–352.
  • Tamura S, Kudo G. 2000. Wind pollination and insect pollination of two temperate willow species, Salix miyabeana and Salix sachalinensis. Plant Ecol. 147(2):185–192.
  • Thien LB, Azuma H, Kawano S. 2000. New perspectives on the pollination biology of basal angiosperms. Int J Plant Sci. 161(S6):225–235.
  • Timerman D, Barrett SCH. 2018. Divergent selection on the biomechanical properties of stamens under wind and insect pollination. Proc R Soc B. 285(1893):20182251.
  • Totland Ø, Sottocornola M. 2001. Pollen limitation of reproductive success in two sympatric alpine willows (Salicaceae) with contrasting pollination strategies. Am J Bot. 88(6):1011–1101.
  • Traveset A. 1994. Reproductive biology of Phillyrea angustifolia L. (Oleaceae) and effect of galling-insects on its reproductive output. Bot J Linn Soc. 114(2):153–166.
  • Turnbull LA, Coomes D, Hector A, Rees M. 2004. Seed mass and the competition/colonization trade-off: competitive interactions and spatial patterns in a guild of annual plants. J Ecol. 92(1):97–109.
  • Vandepitte K, Roldán-Ruiz I, Honnay O. 2009. Reproductive consequences of mate quantity versus mate diversity in a wind-pollinated plant. Acta Oecol. 35(4):548–553.
  • Verma S, Wani IA, Khan S, Sharma S, Kumari P, Kaushik P, El-Serehy HA. 2021. Reproductive biology and pollination ecology of Berberis lycium Royle: A highly valued shrub of immense medicinal significance. Plants. 10(9):1907.
  • Vernet P, Lepercq P, Billiard S, Bourceaux A, Lepart J, Dommée B, Saumitou-Laprade P. 2016. Evidence for the long-term maintenance of a rare self-incompatibility system in Oleaceae. New Phytol. 210(4):1408–1417.
  • Vuletin Selak G, Cuevas J, Goreta Ban S, Perica S. 2014. Pollen tube performance in assessment of compatibility in Olive (Olea europaea L.) cultivars. Sci Hort. 165:36–43.
  • Wallander E. 2001. Evolution of wind-pollination in Fraxinus (Oleaceae): an ecophylogenetic approach. [PhD thesis]. Sweden: Goteborg University. ISBN: 91-88896-37-4.
  • Wang TN, Clifford MR, Martínez-Gómez J, Johnson JC, Riffell JA, Di Stilio VS. 2019. Scent matters: differential contribution of scent to insect response in flowers with insect vs. wind pollination traits. Ann Bot. 123(2):289–301.
  • Wani IA, Verma S, Ahmad P, El-Serehy HA, Hashim MJ. 2022. Reproductive biology of Rheum webbianum Royle, a vulnerable medicinal herb from alpines of North-Western Himalaya. Front Plant Sci. 13:699645.
  • Weller SG, Sakai A, Rankin A, Golonka A, Kutcher B, Ashby K. 1998. Dioecy and the evolution of pollination systems in Schiedea and Alsinidendron (Caryophyllaceae: Alsinoideae) in the Hawaiian Islands. Am J Bot. 85(10):1377–1388.
  • Whitehead DR. 1969. Wind pollination in the angiosperms: evolutionary and environmental considerations. Evolution. 23(1):28–28035.
  • Wu SB, Collins G, Sedgley M. 2002. Sexual compatibility within and between olive cultivars. J Hort Sci Biotech. 77(6):665–673.
  • Wunderlin RP, Richardson D, Hansen B. 1981. Status report on Chionanthus pygmaeus. Unpublished report for: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Atlanta (GA).
  • Yamasaki E, Shoko S. 2013. Wind and insect pollination (ambophily) of Mallotus spp. (Euphorbiaceae) in tropical and temperate forests. Aust J Bot. 61(1):60–66.
  • Yaqoob U, Nawchoo IA. 2016. Reproductive ecology of an endangered monocarpic herbaceous perennial, Ferula jaeschkeana Vatke. Trop Ecol. 57:849–864.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.