Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus

Abstract Long‐lived and large flowers signify high floral maintenance costs. Species of arid/semiarid climates with large flowers are expected to have short flower life spans and pollination‐induced flower longevity in order to curb high floral water and other maintenance costs. We explored the cont...

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Main Authors: Marcela Cuartas‐Domínguez, Valeria Robles, Mary T. K. Arroyo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-08-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9231
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author Marcela Cuartas‐Domínguez
Valeria Robles
Mary T. K. Arroyo
author_facet Marcela Cuartas‐Domínguez
Valeria Robles
Mary T. K. Arroyo
author_sort Marcela Cuartas‐Domínguez
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Long‐lived and large flowers signify high floral maintenance costs. Species of arid/semiarid climates with large flowers are expected to have short flower life spans and pollination‐induced flower longevity in order to curb high floral water and other maintenance costs. We explored the context‐dependent large flower/short flower longevity hypothesis in Eriosyce curvispina (Cactaceae), a large‐flowered species of the semiarid central Chilean Andes. We determined breeding system, flower visitation rates, and open‐pollination fruit set and quantified floral water content. In a temperature‐controlled field manipulative experiment, we measured potential flower longevity and tested for the presence of pollination‐induced floral senescence. We measured the time span of the complete flower cycle defined as from when the flowers began to open to when they were totally closed, and the time span of fully open flowers defined as from when they were totally open until they began to close. The potential flower life span averaged 2.8 days (complete flower cycle) to 2.3 days (fully open flower). The complete flower cycle lasted 21.5 h, but flowers were fully open for only 10.1 h across days. Flower longevity in days was far shorter than reported for a large sample of species in the area. No evidence was found for pollination‐induced flower senescence as a complementary means for reducing floral maintenance costs. Eriosyce curvispina is self‐incompatible and abundantly pollinated by two megachilid bees. The level of pollen limitation (L = 0.36) was lower than the average reported for self‐incompatible angiosperms. Thus, the short flower life span in E. curvispina is not an impediment for high fruit set. Flowers contain >5 g of water of which >2 reside in >40 petaloid tepals. The amount of water is far higher than in another large‐flowered, non‐cactus species in the area, but only about 15% of that reported in the giant saguaro cactus which has larger flowers than E. curvispina.
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spelling doaj.art-d45f524aaa324e208fccfe52e340939a2022-12-22T02:48:12ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582022-08-01128n/an/a10.1002/ece3.9231Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactusMarcela Cuartas‐Domínguez0Valeria Robles1Mary T. K. Arroyo2Facultad de Ciencias Universidad de Chile Santiago ChileCentro Internacional Cabo de Hornos (CHIC) Universidad de Magallanes Puerto Williams ChileFacultad de Ciencias Universidad de Chile Santiago ChileAbstract Long‐lived and large flowers signify high floral maintenance costs. Species of arid/semiarid climates with large flowers are expected to have short flower life spans and pollination‐induced flower longevity in order to curb high floral water and other maintenance costs. We explored the context‐dependent large flower/short flower longevity hypothesis in Eriosyce curvispina (Cactaceae), a large‐flowered species of the semiarid central Chilean Andes. We determined breeding system, flower visitation rates, and open‐pollination fruit set and quantified floral water content. In a temperature‐controlled field manipulative experiment, we measured potential flower longevity and tested for the presence of pollination‐induced floral senescence. We measured the time span of the complete flower cycle defined as from when the flowers began to open to when they were totally closed, and the time span of fully open flowers defined as from when they were totally open until they began to close. The potential flower life span averaged 2.8 days (complete flower cycle) to 2.3 days (fully open flower). The complete flower cycle lasted 21.5 h, but flowers were fully open for only 10.1 h across days. Flower longevity in days was far shorter than reported for a large sample of species in the area. No evidence was found for pollination‐induced flower senescence as a complementary means for reducing floral maintenance costs. Eriosyce curvispina is self‐incompatible and abundantly pollinated by two megachilid bees. The level of pollen limitation (L = 0.36) was lower than the average reported for self‐incompatible angiosperms. Thus, the short flower life span in E. curvispina is not an impediment for high fruit set. Flowers contain >5 g of water of which >2 reside in >40 petaloid tepals. The amount of water is far higher than in another large‐flowered, non‐cactus species in the area, but only about 15% of that reported in the giant saguaro cactus which has larger flowers than E. curvispina.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9231AndesCactaceaefloral water contentflower longevitypollen limitationpollination
spellingShingle Marcela Cuartas‐Domínguez
Valeria Robles
Mary T. K. Arroyo
Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
Ecology and Evolution
Andes
Cactaceae
floral water content
flower longevity
pollen limitation
pollination
title Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
title_full Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
title_fullStr Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
title_full_unstemmed Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
title_short Large flowers can be short‐lived: Insights from a high Andean cactus
title_sort large flowers can be short lived insights from a high andean cactus
topic Andes
Cactaceae
floral water content
flower longevity
pollen limitation
pollination
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9231
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AT valeriarobles largeflowerscanbeshortlivedinsightsfromahighandeancactus
AT marytkarroyo largeflowerscanbeshortlivedinsightsfromahighandeancactus