Recipe
found for orchid aphrodisiac - European
Ophrys sphegodes - Brief Article
Science News
|
|
Researchers have at last figured
out the recipe for one of
nature's sexier perfumes, the
scent produced by an Ophrys
orchid. The blend packs more
power than they expected.
The odor wafting from the small,
reddish-brown blooms of the
European Ophrys sphegodes drives
male bees of the species Andrena
nigroaenea into such a frenzy
that they try to mate with the
blossoms. The blooms offer no
nectar and depend on these
delusory encounters for
pollination. |
Early
attempts to analyze the scent yielded
compounds that evoked only mild interest
from male bees. Researchers had
speculated that the flowers attracted
only those bees "with a low threshold
for sexual stimuli," as Florian P.
Schiestl of the University of Vienna and
his colleagues describe the work.
Using new
techniques, however, they located and
identified a much more potent
aphrodisiac. In the June 3 NATURE, they
describe exposing male bees to extracts
of various parts of both flowers and
female
bees.
The flower power came from the
waxy coating on part of the
bloom, suggesting that the
sexual attractant may have had
its evolutionary roots in
waterproofing.
The
team then ran extracts of both
flower and bee parts through a
gas chromatograph hitched to
male-bee antennae and checked to
see which compounds kicked up
nerve-cell activity.
Fifteen
substances from female bees interested
males quite a bit, and the orchid flower
turned out to produce 14 of them. A
synthetic blend of these fairly simple
compounds, straight-chain saturated and
unsaturated hydrocarbons, drove males
wild with passion. But to the human
nose, notes Vienna's Manfred Ayasse, the
scent "is almost nothing."
COPYRIGHT 1999 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group
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Male and
female pollination success in a
deceptive orchid, a selection study
Ecology, June, 1998 by Lisa M.
O'Connell, Mark O. Johnston
INTRODUCTION
The
intuition that natural selection favors
those floral dimensions and
characteristics that result in precise
pollen transfer is supported by at least
two general patterns. First, most floral
traits display less variation within a
species than do vegetative traits (Berg
1960), and second, pollinator types are
clustered with floral forms into
"syndromes" (Proctor and Yeo 1972,
Faegri and van der Pijl 1979).
Underlying this view is the concept that
floral characters strongly influence the
quantity of pollen removed or deposited
in a single visit. If this is correct,
then it should be possible to detect
statistically significant selection
acting on floral characters in natural
populations. The accumulation of such
analyses will reveal what kinds of
traits are most important in plants
having different pollinators, flower
numbers, floral life-spans, and life
histories.
The effects of floral traits on
pollination success or seed production
have been investigated in many species
(references in Waser 1983a, Galen 1995,
Wilson 1995). The use of regression
techniques expresses these effects as
selection coefficients (Lande and Arnold
1983). Such techniques are often useful
because the coefficients provide (1)
estimates of direct selection as well as
indirect selection acting through
phenotypically correlated traits; (2)
estimates of both linear (directional)
and nonlinear (e.g., stabilizing,
disruptive, correlational) forms of
selection; and (3) estimates that can be
expressed in terms of standard
deviations and, hence, can be compared
among populations, species, or studies.
Several selection studies have been
conducted and have tended to find that
many floral traits experience no
detectable selection, whereas other
traits experience rather weak selection
(Galen and Newport 1987, Campbell 1989,
1991, Schemske and Horvitz 1989,
Campbell et al. 1991, Johnston 1991a,
Andersson and Widen 1993, Gomez 1993,
Herrera 1993, Wilson 1995). Although the
discovery of large selection
coefficients would support the
hypothesis of a strong functional
relationship between trait values and
fitness, weak selection neither supports
nor weakens the hypothesis. In fact,
weak selection is expected to occur
whenever phenotypic variance is low,
even in the presence of a strong
functional relationship. Low phenotypic
variation, then, will often be expected
in characters that are closely related
to fitness (Fenster 1991). In such
cases, factors other than phenotypic
characters, notably microhabitat, will
be expected to have a larger influence
on individual fitness (e.g., Johnson and
Bond 1992, Herrera 1993). Differences in
direction and intensity of viability and
fecundity selection have been related to
environmental variations such as light
level and soil moisture (Stewart and
Schoen 1987). In plants with
pollen-limited flowers, differences in
pollinator assemblage or abundance due
to microhabitats can be associated with
differences in reproductive success (Dafni
1983, Campbell 1987, Johnson and Bond
1992, Laverty 1992, Alexandersson and
Agren 1996).
Orchids are particularly suitable for
measuring both female and male
reproductive success at the pollination
stage because pollen is dispersed in
discrete packets (pollinia), the receipt
or removal of which is easily
determined. Male reproductive success is
ultimately the number of seeds sired,
and removed pollen does not necessarily
make it on to a stigma of a conspecific
flower. However, studies of species with
pollinia have shown a positive
correlation between pollinia removal and
deposition or seeds sired; therefore,
pollinia removal can serve as an
estimate of male success (Broyles and
Wyatt 1990, Nilsson et al. 1992).
Species number and diversity of floral
morphology in orchids are often
attributed to their close association
with a specific pollinator (Nilsson
1992, Steiner et al. 1994, but see
Dressier 1993). It is estimated that of
the 18 000 to 30 000 species of orchids,
nearly one-third offer no pollinator
reward in the form of nectar or pollen
(Gill 1989). Many such nonrewarding
(also termed "deceitful" or "deceptive")
species probably induce visits by
inexperienced pollinators (Nilsson 1980,
Ackerman 1981, 1986, Fritz 1990), and
other species mimic pollinator mates
(Borg-Karlson 1990). Reproductive
success in both rewarding and
nonrewarding orchids is often limited by
pollinators (Firmage and Cole 1988,
Johnson and Bond 1992, Burd 1994), and
nonrewarding orchids are well-known for
their low pollination success rate in
nature (e.g., Thien and Marcks 1972,
Ackerman 1981, Nilsson 1992, Steiner et
al. 1994). The number of visits an
individual pollinator makes to flowers
of a nonrewarding species is expected to
decline with experience. During the
learning period, nonrewarding flowers
will probably be visited most often when
they are near large numbers of rewarding
flowers (Dafni 1983, Alexandersson and
Agren 1996). Thus, we expect pollination
success in nonrewarding species to be
largely determined by spatial and
temporal proximity to the more rewarding
species. We expect that, if fruit set is
limited by pollen rather than resources,
then traits involved in pollen
acquisition should be under strong
selection (Haig and Westoby 1988).
In this study, we investigated
pollinator-mediated selection acting
through both female pollination success
(pollen receipt) and male pollination
success (pollen removal) on
morphological and phenological traits in
two populations of the pink lady's
slipper orchid, Cypripedium acaule Ait.
It is a nonrewarding species bearing a
single flower. Flower size would
experience positive directional
selection if larger flowers attract more
pollinators (Young and Stanton 1990),
but it could be under negative
directional selection if pollen transfer
is more efficient in smaller flowers
(Galen and Newport 1987, Armbruster
1990). Flower height is expected to be
under positive directional selection if
taller inflorescences attract more
pollinators. If pollinator abundance is
highest early in the season, or bees
learn to avoid nonrewarding flowers,
flowering date would experience negative
directional selection. We first
investigated pollination success rates
and pollen limitation of fruit set and
then asked the following specific
questions concerning natural selection.
(1) What is the total strength of
directional and nonlinear selection
acting on each character through male,
female, and total pollination success,
(a) including the effects of correlated
traits, and (b) independently of
correlated traits? (2) Does microhabitat
affect pollination success? (3) Does
selection act differently (a) through
male and female function, (b) in
different microhabitats within
populations, or (c) in different
populations?
METHODS
The pink
lady's slipper is a long-lived
herbaceous perennial that grows in
acidic soil in open pine or mixed woods
throughout eastern North America (Brackley
1985). Most plants have two basal leaves
with a stalk bearing one flower. The
rhizome grows only a few millimeters a
year, and genetically separate
individuals can easily be distinguished.
In our study, [less than]1% of plants
produced two or three flower stalks and
extra pairs of leaves. The flower has a
large, sack-like labellum with a
longitudinal slit on its upper surface.
There are two anthers, each containing a
pollinium. The pollinium is not discrete
and waxy, as in most orchids, but is a
mass of sticky pollen that is usually
removed as a unit when touched (Plowright
et al. 1980; L. O'Connell, personal
observation). In Nova Scotia,
Cypripedium acaule blooms between late
May and early July, and individual
flowers remain open for [approximately]3
wk, but senesce [less than or equal to]5
d after pollination (L. O'Connell,
personal observation).
The pink lady's slipper is pollinated by
large queen bumble bees. Bombus vagans
has been identified as a definite
pollinator and B. borealis as a probable
pollinator in New Brunswick (Plowright
et al. 1980). Despite the flower's
bright color, conspicuous "nectar
guides," and sweet smell, the pink
lady's slipper produces no nectar. Once
a bumble bee has entered a flower
through the labellum slit, the infolded
margins ensure that the sole exit point
lies upward, at the labellum base. To
exit, the bee first brushes against the
stigma and then an anther. The mechanics
of pollen transfer in Cypripedium are
fully described by Darwin
([1877]1984:226-232). No flower visitors
were observed during this study.
Cypripedium acaule is highly fertile and
often sets 100% of its fruits after
hand-pollination. A 10-yr study of the
pink lady's slipper in Virginia (Gill
1989) found 100% fruit set after
handpollination, compared to [less
than]5% naturally. Davis (1986) obtained
75% fruit set after cross-pollination
and 70% fruit set after
self-pollination. In another study (Primack
and Hall 1990), 100% of cross-pollinated
flowers and 90% of self-pollinated
flowers set fruit. However, fruit
production in natural populations is
pollen limited throughout North America
(Plowright et al. 1980, Davis 1986,
Barrett and Helenurm 1987, Gill 1989,
Primack and Hall 1990).
We studied two populations of pink
lady's slippers near Halifax, Nova
Scotia. Hemlock Ravine Park is an area
with mixed deciduous and coniferous
trees, with parts of the park containing
old-growth hemlocks. Long Lake
Provincial Park has areas that are
densely covered by ericaceous shrubs and
younger trees as a result of recent
burns.
Pollen
limitation
In Hemlock
Ravine, 29 flowers were hand-pollinated
(18 self-pollinated and 11
cross-pollinated) to test whether
current-year fruit set was limited by
pollen receipt. The number of
hand-pollinated flowers successfully
initiating a fruit was compared to fruit
set in open-pollinated flowers in each
population.
Traits
analyzed
Each
population was visited six times, at
intervals of five or six days, from late
May to early July of 1994. In this
study, male pollination success was
measured as the number of pollinia
removed (0, 1, or 2), whereas female
pollination success was measured as the
number of pollinia received (0 or 1).
All flowers that received pollen
subsequently produced a fruit.
Seven morphological or phenological
traits on 259 individuals at Hemlock
Ravine and 248 individuals at Long Lake
were studied. Five of the morphological
traits were labellum width and length,
flower height, stalk length, and the
length of the longest leaf. Labellum
width and length were measured at their
widest and longest part, respectively,
with a digital caliper to the closest
0.1 mm. A sixth morphological trait,
labellum frontal area, was estimated as
(length x width)/2. The length of the
flower stalk and plant height were
measured to the nearest 0.5 cm at flower
senescence, when the flower reached its
greatest height while still being open
to pollinators. (The flower stalk
continued growing at a rate of
[approximately]2 cm/wk after the flower
was open.) Flower height was the
vertical distance from the ground to the
base of the flower. Stalk length was the
distance along the stalk from the ground
to the base of the flower. These two
measures differed only when the stalk
was not vertical. Leaf length was
included as an estimate of vegetative
size. Flower-opening date, the sole
phenological trait, was measured as the
first day that the petals lifted high
enough to allow a pollinator to enter
the labellum.
Microhabitat
Pollinator abundance appeared to vary
according to canopy cover as well as
identity and density of other species in
flower. Within each population,
individuals were therefore categorized
as belonging to one of four
microhabitats characterized by
surrounding vegetation and expected to
differ in bumble bee abundance: A, areas
with dense ericaceous shrubs and no
trees; B, areas with dense shrubs and
deciduous trees; C, areas with deciduous
trees and sparse shrubs; D, areas with
deciduous and coniferous trees, but no
shrubs. Cypripedium acaule flowers in
late spring, when deciduous trees have
not yet put out their leaves. More sun
reaches understory flowers in
microhabitats B and C than under
coniferous trees in D. Ericaceous shrubs
such as blueberry (Vaccinum spp.) and
huckleberry (Gaylussacia spp.) were in
flower in late May and early June and
attracted a large number of bumble bees
(L. O'Connell, personal observation).
Statistical analyses
Regression analyses. - Coefficients from
a univariate (single-trait) regression
estimate the total strength of selection
acting on a trait both directly and
indirectly through correlated traits.
Coefficients from multivariate
(multiple-trait) regression estimate the
strength of selection acting
independently of any potentially
correlated traits included in the
analysis. When expressed in units of
standard deviation, univariate
regression co-efficients are equivalent
to selection differentials. We will use
"selection differential" to refer to
univariate coefficients, and "gradients"
to refer to multivariate coefficients (Lande
and Arnold 1983). Directional ([Beta][prime])
and nonlinear ([Gamma][prime]) selection
differentials and gradients were
estimated using the following regression
model:
where w is the relative standardized
fitness measure, [Alpha] is a constant,
z[prime] is the standardized trait
value, and [Epsilon] is error.
Directional differentials and gradients
were obtained using the first two terms
on the right side of the equation,
whereas nonlinear coefficients were
obtained using the full model.
Directional coefficients were included
in the nonlinear analyses to remove any
effect of change in mean (due to
directional selection) on change in
dispersion (Lande and Arnold 1983).
Before regression, and separately for
pollen receipt and dissemination, each
absolute pollination success was divided
by the population average to calculate
standardized ("relative") fitness, w. To
obtain an estimate of the "total"
relative pollination success of each
plant, we divided the sum of male and
female relative success by two (Lloyd
and Bawa 1984). Trait values before
selection were standardized to zero mean
and unit standard deviation. These
values were squared and entered into the
regression model, yielding (1/2)[[Gamma][prime].sub.ii].
All regression coefficients were
expressed in units of change in relative
fitness per standard deviation, as
indicated by the prime symbol, thus
facilitating comparison of selection
among traits and between populations (Lande
and Arnold 1983). As noted, in the case
of directional selection, the univariate
coefficient, [Beta][prime], represents
the regression slope of relative fitness
on the standardized character as well as
the selection differential, s[prime],
which is the shift in the standardized
population mean before and after
selection. Positive values of [[Gamma][prime].sub.ii]
indicate that the selection surface is
concave upwards (disruptive selection),
whereas negative values indicate
downward concavity (stabilizing
selection) (Mitchell-Olds and Shaw 1987,
Phillips and Arnold 1989). Values of [[Gamma][prime].sub.ij]
(i [not equal to] j) indicate selection
favoring positive or negative
correlation between the characters i and
j. Although logistic regression may be
used when fitness has values of 0 or 1
(as for female fitness), least-squares
regression is preferred, as it gives
essentially identical results and
maintains consistency among selection
studies (data not shown).
When traits are highly intercorrelated,
or important variables are missing from
the analysis, selection gradients will
not accurately represent selection on a
trait (Neter et al. 1983, Mitchell-Olds
and Shaw 1987). To avoid problems
associated with intercorrelations
between morphological traits in
multilinear regression, we dropped
traits from highly intercorrelated
groups (Lande and Arnold 1983). We chose
a subset of three characters (opening
date, flower height, and labellum
length) to be included in the
multivariate analyses, for the following
reasons: stalk length was highly
correlated with flower height; thus,
only the latter was included because we
would expect pollinators to select for
the height of the inflorescence rather
than the length of the stalk. Labellum
length was chosen, rather than frontal
area, because selection differentials
for frontal area were not significant in
any multivariate analysis. Leaf length
was not included in the multivariate
analyses because we would expect
selection on leaf size acting through
pollination success to be indirect.
We wrote programs in BASIC to obtain all
multivariate and univariate regression
coefficients, as well as the associated
95% CI from 1000 (occasionally 5000)
bootstrap iterations (Efron and
Tibshirani 1993). For each bootstrap
iteration, we randomly sampled
observations with replacement from the
original observations, and calculated a
new regression coefficient.
Corresponding two-tailed P values were
calculated by determining the smaller of
the number of bootstrap coefficients
greater or less than zero, multiplying
by two, and dividing by the number of
bootstrap iterations (Edgington 1987,
Crowley 1992). For a few traits in the
linear multivariate analyses, P values
from standard parametric regression fell
on a different side of 0.05 than did
those from bootstrapping. We therefore
used 5000 iterations for bootstrapping
all the linear multivariate analyses.
For each trait, we tested whether female
and male regression coefficients
differed by randomly assigning
observations with replacement to each
sex function. The proportion of 1000
outcomes in which the difference between
the male and female coefficient was
greater or less than the original
difference was determined. As before,
two-tailed P values were twice the
smaller of these two proportions. A
similar bootstrap procedure was used to
test for differences between populations
in univariate coefficients.
Chi-square and Monte Carlo simulations.
- To test whether female and male
pollination success differed among
microhabitats, a [[Chi].sup.2] or G test
was not suitable, because some table
cells contained expected frequencies
less than five (Sokal and Rohlf 1981).
Therefore, a Monte Carlo simulation was
conducted in BASIC by generating data
sets having the same number of
observations per microhabitat as in the
original data. For each microhabitat,
the number of observations in each
fitness level was then determined by
random draws, with probability
determined by the fraction of all
observations in each fitness level in
the original data. The resulting
[[Chi].sup.2] value was then compared
with that from the original data (Hall
and Wilson 1991), and P values were
calculated after 20 000 iterations as
for regression coefficients.
Tukey test. - Mean values for opening
date, flower height, and labellum length
were compared among microhabitats using
a Tukey multiple-comparison test (SYSTAT
1992. These results were identical to
those from bootstrapping).
TABLE 1. Distribution of male and female
pollination success in the
orchid Cypripedium acaule in two Nova
Scotia populations, expressed
as percentage of the total observations
(number of individuals in
parentheses). Plants may receive 0 or 1
pollinium and may disperse
0, 1, or 2 pollinia.
Male Female fitness
fitness 0 1 Total
Hemlock Ravine
0 86.5% (224) 0.4% (1) 86.9% (225)
1 7.0% (18) 4.2% (11) 11.2% (29)
2 1.1% (3) 0.8% (2) 1.9% (5)
Total 94.6% (245) 5.4% (14) 100% (259)
Long Lake
0 77.4% (192) 1.2% (3) 78.6% (195)
1 8.5% (21) 8.9% (22) 17.3% (43)
2 1.2% (3) 2.8% (7) 4.0% (10)
Total 87.1% (216) 12.9% (32) 100% (248)
ANOVA. - To test whether microhabitat
explained a significant portion of the
variation in fitness through male,
female, and total pollination success,
we conducted an ANOVA. Variables
included in the model were microhabitat,
flower opening date, flower height, and
labellum length (SYSTAT 1992).
ANCOVA. - To determine whether the
direction or strength of selection
differed among microhabitats, we
conducted a separate analysis for each
of the seven original traits. To test
whether slopes differed among
microhabitats, we calculated the F ratio
for the interaction between microhabitat
and the trait by using the procedure in
Zar (1974:300). We calculated the F
ratio for 1000 randomly sampled data
sets with replacement from the original
data. Here, P values were the proportion
of bootstrap results in which F exceeded
that from the original data set.
Bonferroni corrections. - Because of the
large number of correlational and
regression analyses on the same data, we
performed sequential Bonferroni
corrections to reduce the probability of
obtaining significant results by chance
alone (Rice 1989). For correlations,
regression analyses, and ANCOVA,
separate corrections were done for each
population. For regression analyses, we
also performed separate sequential
Bonferroni corrections for each sex
(male, female, and total).
RESULTS
Male and female pollination success
All 29 hand-pollinated flowers (selfed
and crossed) initiated and matured
fruits. Among open-pollinated flowers,
the percentage receiving a pollinium,
all of which produced a fruit, was 5.4%
at Hemlock Ravine and 12.9% at Long Lake
(Table 1). At Hemlock Ravine, 11.2% of
the flowers had one pollinium removed
and 1.9% had two removed. At Long Lake,
17.3% had one removed and 4.0% had two
removed. Male and female reproductive
success were highly correlated in both
populations (Pearson r: Hemlock Ravine r
= 0.54, P [less than] 0.00001; Long Lake
r = 0.65, P [less than] 0.00001; Table
2). Of flowers that received pollen, 92%
and 91% had at least one pollinium
removed at Hemlock Ravine and Long Lake,
respectively (Table 1). By dividing the
number of pollinia received (the number
of flowers with female success) by the
number of total pollinia dispersed, we
estimated the chance of a pollinium
being deposited on a stigma once it has
been removed from a flower as 36% at
Hemlock Ravine and 51% at Long Lake.
Traits means and correlation between
traits
In both populations, all of the
morphological traits (stalk length,
flower height, labellum width, labellum
length, labellum frontal area, and leaf
length) were intercorrelated (Table 2).
Female fitness at Hemlock Ravine was
negatively correlated with
flower-opening date (Table 2). The
values for morphological traits were all
greater in Long Lake than in Hemlock
Ravine, with the exception of leaf
length, which did not differ between the
populations (Table 3). Plants at Long
Lake also flowered earlier, on average.
Univariate selection analyses
The [r.sup.2] values from the univariate
linear regression were [less than]0.04
in every case. The selection
differentials for flower-opening date
were negative and statistically
significant for female, male, and total
pollination success at Hemlock Ravine
(Table 4). At Long Lake, the selection
differentials for flower-opening date
were also negative for male, female, and
total pollination success, although they
were not statistically significant.
Selection differentials were positive
for flower height (or stalk length) at
Hemlock Ravine for male, female, and
total reproductive success. No
directional selection differential was
statistically significant in Long Lake.
No trait had a significant nonlinear
coefficient ([[Gamma].sub.ii] or [[Gamma].sub.ij])
in the univariate analyses.
There were no significant differences
between the slopes of male and female
univariate regressions (all 14 P values
[greater than]0.2).
Multivariate selection analyses
In all multivariate analyses, the
[R.sup.2] values were al- ways small
(from 0.03 to 0.08). As in the
univariate regressions, coefficients for
flower-opening date were negative in
Hemlock Ravine for female, male, and
total pollination success (Table 5). The
regression coefficient for flower height
was significant and positive for both
male and total reproductive success in
Hemlock Ravine. The analyses showed no
significant regression coefficients for
any trait in Long Lake. Correlational
selection coefficients ([[Gamma][prime].sub.ij])
for the interaction between opening date
and flower height were negative and
significant for female, male, and total
success in Hemlock Ravine. Correlational
selection for flower height and labellum
length was significant and negative for
female success. There was no significant
quadratic or correlational selection
detected in Long Lake.
Microhabitat
Reproductive success. - At Hemlock
Ravine, Monte Carlo simulations revealed
a significant difference in female
pollination success among microhabitats
(P = 0.009), but not in male success (P
= 0.13; [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 1A, B
OMITTED]). At Long Lake, both male (P =
0.0004) and female (P = 0.002)
pollination success differed among
microhabitats [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE
1C, D OMITTED]. Figure 1 suggests that
both male and female success was highest
in microhabitats A and B, which have
ericaceous shrubs and an open canopy.
Flowers in microhabitat D, under
coniferous trees, had both low female
and male reproductive success.
A general linear model (ANOVA),
including microhabitat as a class
variable and opening date, flower
height, and labellum length as
covariates, showed that microhabitat
explained a significant proportion of
the variance in pollination success in
all cases except male reproductive
success at Hemlock Ravine (results not
shown). [R.sup.2] values remained low in
all cases (0.076 to 0.15). In analyses
in which microhabitat was statistically
significant, the significance levels of
the traits included in the analyses
generally remained similar to those of
the multivariate analyses. However,
inclusion of microhabitat rendered
labellum length significant for female
success at Hemlock Ravine and flower
height significant for female success at
Long Lake.
Trait values. - Mean opening date
differed among microhabitats only in the
Hemlock Ravine population (Table 6). In
contrast, flower height and labellum
length differed among microhabitats only
at Long Lake. Here, plants tended to be
shorter in A, the microhabitat with the
greatest pollination success.
Differences in selection among
microhabitats and between populations
Selection measured through male success
was indistinguishable among
microhabitats in both populations (Table
7). Such relationships between traits
and success did differ, however, for
several traits acting [TABULAR DATA FOR
TABLE 4 OMITTED] through both female and
total success at Hemlock Ravine (stalk
length, flower height, leaf length).
There were no significant differences
between the two populations in the
selection differentials measured through
male, female, and total pollination
success (all 21 P values [greater
than]0.05).
DISCUSSION
Similarity of male and female
selection
Examining seven traits in two
populations, we found no evidence for a
difference between male and female
selection coefficients or gradients. A
unit (standard deviation) change in a
trait value, therefore, changed relative
male and female success to the same
degree. In both populations, the male
and female 95% CI overlapped for all
seven directional differentials, all
seven nonlinear differentials, all three
directional gradients, and all six
nonlinear gradients (Tables 4 and 5).
This conclusion is supported by explicit
tests for differences between male and
female directional differentials, which
represent the total effects of direct
and indirect (through correlated traits)
directional selection.
Why does selection act similarly through
male and female functions in the pink
lady's slipper? The variance in relative
fitness (I; Crow 1958) places an upper
bound on selection coefficients and can
be viewed as the "opportunity for
selection" (Arnold and Wade 1984). It is
often suggested that I is higher through
male function than through female, and
that male selection might therefore be
stronger. In a California population of
honey bee-pollinated wild radish,
Raphanus sativus, the variance in
absolute female fertility exceeded that
of estimated male fertility (Devlin and
Ellstrand 1990). Likewise, in both
populations of orchids studied here,
variances in relative fitness were
higher through female function than
through male function. Female and male
values were [approximately]6.9 and 4.2,
respectively, at Long Lake, and
[approximately]16.5 and 7.0,
respectively, at Hemlock Ravine. Thus,
there was no less opportunity for
selection through pollen receipt than
through pollen dispersal. Furthermore,
female selection coefficients and
gradients, although not significantly
different, tended to be greater than
male selection coefficients in absolute
value. In the case of Cypripedium acaule,
it seems inappropriate to assume that
selection acts on floral characteristics
primarily through male function, as is
often suggested (e.g., Queller 1983,
Bell 1985; see Murcia 1990, Wilson et
al. 1994).
A more likely explanation for similarity
of male and female selection
coefficients is as follows. In the pink
lady's slipper and many other
single-flowered species with two pollen
packets, relative pollination success is
constrained to only two levels in the
female case (zero and high), and only
three in the male case (zero, medium,
and high). At the pollination stage, a
single pollinator visit will almost
certainly result in the removal of one
pollinium. Therefore, two visits
saturate the male fitness gain curve,
and one visit can potentially saturate
the female curve. Some plants experience
relatively high numbers of pollinator
visits, primarily as a result of
microhabitat. Thus, both the male and
female fitness-gain curves saturate
readily in those microhabitats with a
high chance, or frequency, of pollinator
visits, such as microhabitat A in these
Nova Scotia populations. Under such
circumstances, male and female success
will be positively correlated, as was
found. The selection coefficients are
similar because most plants receiving
any pollinator visits receive a
sufficient number to obtain relatively
high female and male pollination
success.
Selection differences among
microhabitats and between populations
Differences in reproductive success
among microhabitats can be associated
with differences in the strength of
selection on a phenotypic trait. In this
study, we found that at least two of
four microhabitats differed
significantly in selection coefficients
for several traits. In contrast to these
differences among microhabitats within
populations, we found no differences
between the two populations in the
strength of selection (see also Schemske
1984, Galen 1989, Brassard and Schoen
1990, Campbell et al. 1991, Johnston
1991a, Wilson 1995).
Because the pink lady's slipper is a
long-lived perennial, selection in one
year may not represent selection in
another. Disturbances and community
succession will alter microhabitat type
over time. Stuckey (1967) observed that
the pink lady's slipper occurred in
larger numbers after brush fires, and
that peak blooming was reached 10-15 yr
later. Temporally variable selection is
well-known in the case of germination
date (Kalisz 1986, Miller 1987), and,
although we are not aware of statistical
comparisons of selection coefficients in
different seasons for reproductive
traits, some studies have found
statistically significant selection
coefficients in some years, but not
others (Campbell 1989, Scheiner 1989,
Schemske and Horvitz 1989, Widen 1991).
In this study, Cypripedium plants near
ericaceous shrubs, particularly
blueberry, appeared to be far more
successful than Cypripedium plants in
other areas. In Long Lake, pink lady's
slippers growing in microhabitats A and
B had pollination success rates higher
than the average for the population. As
bumble bees visit the nectar-producing
blueberry flowers, they may be tempted
to explore the large pink lady's slipper
flower. When bumble bees are abundant
among blueberry bushes, these
exploratory visits may be frequent,
leading to a high pollination success
rate. Rather than competing with the
huckleberry and blueberry flowers, the
pink lady's slipper benefits from their
proximity. Davis (1986) also observed,
in Massachusetts, that there was an
increase in the number of pollinator
visits to C. acaule in the presence of
ericaceous shrubs. Pollination of the
deceitful orchid Orchis caspia also
depends on the proximity of
nectariferous species (Dafni 1983). The
main pollinators of O. caspia are
several species of bees with an
apparently low ability to learn to avoid
the deceptive flowers. Laverty (1992)
similarly found an increase in fruit set
in the nectarless mayapple (Podophyllum
peltatum) when it was in proximity of
nectar-producing lousewort (Pedicularis
canadensis).
ANOVAs that included microhabitat as
well as opening date, height, and
labellum length showed that microhabitat
significantly explains more variance in
pollination success than the floral
traits for female fitness in both
populations and for male fitness in Long
Lake. We therefore agree with Herrera
(1993) that environmental conditions may
determine fitness to a greater degree
than do plant characters themselves.
Pollen limitation and selection
Natural fruit-set in the pink lady's
slipper was 5% in Hemlock Ravine and 13%
in Long Lake. These low percentages
indicate high levels of pollen
limitation within a season, as every
experimentally and naturally pollinated
flower produced a fruit. Pollen
limitation [TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 5
OMITTED] appears to be characteristic of
Cypripedium acaule, because its
presence, or that of low fruit-set, has
been documented in many parts of eastern
North America (Plowright et al. 1980,
Davis 1986, Barrett and Helenurm 1987,
Gill 1989, Primack and Hall 1990). A
similar range of natural fruit-set
occurs in other nectarless orchid
species (e.g., Ackerman and Montalvo
1990). Single-season studies of pollen
limitation do not demonstrate that
lifetime seed production is limited by
pollinators, because seed production may
have costs expressed in reduced survival
or future fertility (Janzen et al. 1980,
Calvo and Horvitz 1990). In
Massachusetts populations of C. acaule,
Primack and Hall (1990) found that
continual fruit production significantly
reduces both leaf area and the
likelihood of flowering in the next
season. Similar effects have been
documented in other orchids (Montalvo
and Ackerman 1987, Ackerman 1989, Snow
and Whigham 1989, Zimmerman and Aide
1989, Ackerman and Montalvo 1990, but
see Calvo 1990).
It has been hypothesized that selection
acting through female function should
increase as the degree of pollen
limitation increases (Johnston 1991a,
b). Some support for this idea was found
in Lobelia cardinalis, where the more
pollen-limited of two populations showed
a higher number of statistically
significant standardized selection
coefficients, as estimated for
hypothesized larger sample sizes. (Of
course, because selection acts on
relative, not absolute, fitness, this
prediction requires some degree of
nonlinearity between trait value and
female success.) In the present study,
all experimentally (and naturally)
pollinated plants subsequently produced
a fruit. Because the natural levels of
fruit-set were [approximately]13% in
Long Lake and [approximately]5% in
Hemlock Ravine, one can conclude that
pollen limitation of fruit production
was greater in Hemlock Ravine. We found
no significant differences between the
two populations in (univariate)
selection coefficients; such potential
differences were apparently overwhelmed
by microhabitat effects within the
populations. Nevertheless, in accordance
with the prediction, absolute values of
these differentials were larger in
Hemlock Ravine than in Long Lake for six
of seven coefficients and for all nine
multivariate gradients.
Once inside a labellum, a bee is
probably very efficient at removing a
pollen sac. Of those flowers receiving a
pollinium in the present study, 92%
(Hemlock Ravine) and 91% (Long Lake)
also had at least one removed. Thus, the
number of pollen packets removed is
probably determined by the number of
bumble bees lured into the flowers. A
pink lady's slipper pollinium detaches
as a large, sticky unit and can adhere
to the pollinator until it visits
another lady's slipper. The pollinium is
viscous and probably remains viable for
hours or days after it has been removed
from the flower. Pollen removed from two
other species of orchids, Cypripedium
reginae and Calopogon tuberosus, and
applied to stigmas 8 d later can still
initiate fruit production and fertilize
a large number of ovules (H. Proctor,
personal communication). For the pink
lady's slipper, the proportion of
removed pollinia successfully
transferred to another flower appears to
be high for a deceptive species (36% in
Hemlock Ravine and 51% in Long Lake).
This suggests that pollen remains
attached to pollinators long enough for
successful deposition on a stigma, and
that it remains viable for this period,
as all flowers receiving pollen
subsequently set fruit. The chance of
pollen reaching a conspecific stigma can
be higher in orchids (20% for
Cymbidiella flabellata [Orchidaceae;
Nilsson et al. 1986]) and milkweeds (25%
for Asclepias syriaca [Asclepiadaceae;
Pleasants 1991]) than in species without
pollen packages (3% for Polemonium
viscosum [Polemoniaceae; Galen and
Stanton 1989] and 0.6% for Erythronium
grandiflorum [Liliaceae; Harder and
Thomson 1989]).
Selection on floral traits
Flower-opening date. - The relationship
between flowering time and total seed
production has been investigated in
several species (e.g., Fouquieria
splendens, Waser 1979; Polemonium
foliosissimum, Zimmerman and Gross
1984). In both Hemlock Ravine and Long
Lake, earlier flowering plants had the
greatest total (male and female)
pollination success. There are at least
two reasons for this. First, deceptive
flowers may have a higher success
earlier in the season because
pollinators eventually learn to avoid
them (Nilsson 1980, Dafni 1984, Fritz
1990). Second, pollinator abundance and,
therefore, pollination success, may be
correlated with flowering in another
species. In these Nova Scotia orchid
populations, bumble bee abundance
appeared [TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 6
OMITTED] to decrease when the pink
lady's slippers were at their peak
blooming period. Blueberry (Vaccinum
myrtilloides) and huckleberry (Gaylussacia
baccata) bloomed during late May and the
first two weeks of June, and attracted a
large number of bumble bees (L.
O'Connell, personal observation). This
is the period when almost all pink
lady's slippers were successfully
pollinated (data not shown). Later in
June, deciduous trees had flushed their
leaves, bumble bee abundance was low,
and few pink lady's slippers were
pollinated.
The effect of the presence and/or
phenology of one species on the
pollinator service to another has been
documented in both nonrewarding and
rewarding plants (Schemske et al. 1978,
Thomson 1978, Rathcke 1983, 1988, Waser
1983b, Laverty 1992). On a Baltic
island, the highest pollination rate of
the nonrewarding Orchis spitzelii
occurred prior to the population peak in
number of open flowers, during the
flowering phase of Arctostaphylos
uva-ursi, the main food plant for bumble
bee pollinators (Fritz 1990). At one
site where A. uva-ursi was absent,
fruit-set was lower. Pollination rates
of another deceptive orchid, Calypso
bulbosa, also corresponded positively
with bumble bee abundance (Ackerman
1981). In multiflowered plants,
coordination of flowering time with
pollinator activity does not necessarily
increase seed production, even in
pollen-limited situations. For example,
in a Michigan population of
nectariferous Lobelia cardinalis, larger
plants flowered earlier, as measured by
the date that the median flower opened
(Johnston 1991a). Thus, earlier
flowering individuals produced more
seeds per plant. Seed number per flower,
in contrast, increased at later
median-flower dates, as the much more
abundant hummingbird food plant,
Impatiens capensis, reached peak
flowering. These opposing processes led
to a negative selection differential,
but a positive selection gradient.
TABLE 7. Analyses of covariance in
univariate selection coefficients
among the four microhabitats within two
populations of Cypripedium
acaule. A different analysis was
performed for each variable. F
ratios and P values are for the
interaction between trait and
microhabitat.
Male Female Total
Trait F P F P F P
Hemlock Ravine
Opening date 0.69 0.56 1.15 0.33 1.22
0.304
Stalk length 1.68 0.17 5.94 0.00063 5.07
0.002
Flower height 2.22 0.086 8.05 0.00004
6.86 0.0002
Labellum width 0.47 0.70 1.02 0.038 0.97
0.41
Labellum length 0.36 0.078 0.81 0.49
0.73 0.53
Frontal area 0.39 0.76 0.53 0.66 0.60
0.61
Leaf length 1.87 0.14 6.15 0.00048 5.37
0.0014
Long Lake
Opening date 1.39 0.29 3.53 0.057 2.53
0.11
Stalk length 1.07 0.34 1.57 0.24 1.61
0.21
Flower height 2.59 0.04 1.50 0.25 2.35
0.087
Labellum width 1.20 0.24 0.30 0.76 0.67
0.50
Labellum length 1.16 0.35 0.34 0.82 0.32
0.81
Frontal area 1.49 0.19 0.44 0.69 0.88
0.43
Leaf length 2.25 0.18 2.44 0.16 2.93
0.085
Note: For the F ratios, numerator
degrees of freedom are 3, and
denominator degrees of freedom are n -
8; see Table 4 for sample
sizes (n). Values that are statistically
significant after
sequential Bonferroni correction are
boldface.
If there is selection for earlier
opening flowers, why do pink lady's
slippers not evolve to open earlier?
This species is one of the first flowers
to open in late spring. A late frost can
destroy buds, flowers, and early-forming
capsules (Luer 1975). It is also
possible that another strong selective
pressure not included in the analyses
counteracts the effect of selection on
early flowering date. In a multiyear
study of Senecio integrifolius, Widen
(1991) found consistent and strong
selection against late flowering, but
weak and inconsistent selection against
early flowering. Stabilizing selection
thus occurred in some years, but not in
others. Attempts to measure selection on
flowering date in other species have
found stabilizing (Augspurger 1981,
Schmitt 1983) or inconsistent
directional selection that changes from
year to year (Primack 1980; see also
Gross and Werner 1983, Zimmerman and
Gross 1984). Selection at the flowering
stage is not necessarily indicative of
selection at the stage of seed
production or establishment of offspring
(Galen 1995). In hummingbird-pollinated
Ipomopsis aggregata, earlier flowering
was associated with greater flower
number and seed number, both as
expected, but the amount of experimental
dye (and presumably pollen) received per
flower was higher instead among later
flowering plants (Campbell 1991).
Flower height. - Male, female, and total
pollination success increased with plant
(flower) height at Hemlock Ravine, but
not at Long Lake. Microhabitat factors
such as soil and sunlight might be
expected to have an influence on plant
height, creating an apparent causal
relationship. There is no evidence for
this, however, as plants in the more
successful microhabitats at Hemlock
Ravine were no taller or shorter than
those in other areas. Therefore, the
positive association between height and
success did not appear to have resulted
from microhabitat conditions separately
affecting both pollinator abundance and
height. At Long Lake, individuals in the
best microhabitat, A, had shorter
stalks. This negative association
between a trait and a fitness-enhancing
microhabitat apparently caused two
selection directional differentials and
all three directional gradients to be
indistinguishable from zero (see Rausher
1992). At Hemlock Ravine, height,
opening date, and pollination success
were correlated. Mulivariate analysis
showed that height and opening date each
had direct effects on success and
remained statistically significant when
the other trait was held constant.
Correlational selection for early
opening and greater height was also
detected.
It is unknown whether plant height
varies from one year to another. Primack
et al. (1994) found that there was a
decrease in leaf area in pink lady's
slippers that had produced a fruit in
the previous year, but they did not
indicate whether there was a decrease in
plant height or flower size. In this
study, leaf size was more highly
correlated with stalk length than with
floral characters. A shorter plant
during one season may be the result of
successful fruit production in the
previous year.
In its effects on reproductive success,
plant height appears to be less well
studied than many other traits.
Nevertheless, it is known that
pollinators often forage at a particular
height, causing assortative pollination.
In Lythrum salicaria, the correlation
between heights of successively visited
plants exceeds 0.8 (Levin and Kerster
1973). The sphecid pollinators of the
sexually deceptive orchid Chilogolottis
trilabra prefer flowers within a narrow
height range (Peakall and Handel 1993).
Because most natural plants are below
this height, there may be positive
directional selection for height. In
many cases, pollinators might
consistently favor taller plants because
they have more open flowers. For some
species, however, it is known that
taller plants achieve disproportionately
greater seed-set than shorter plants,
independently of effects of total flower
number or number of open flowers per day
(Johnston 1991a).
Flower size: labellum length. - "Flower
size" is a general term that can include
corolla flare, tube depth, and other
aspects of petal area. Corolla flare may
often act as a signal to pollinators,
causing a positive relationship with
visitation frequency (Stanton and
Preston 1988, Eckhart 1991, Galen 1995,
but see Mitchell 1994). Size may often
be indirectly selected because
pollinators use it as a cue for a
correlated trait, such as nectar reward
(Cresswell and Galen 1991). It is not
yet known whether flowers that offer no
reward benefit especially by being large
and obvious. Schemske and Agren (1995)
found that bees preferentially visited
larger experimental (artificial) flowers
modeled after the partially
deceit-pollinated tropical herb Begonia
involucrata (see also Schemske et al.
1995).
Multivariate analysis for Hemlock Ravine
showed negative directional coefficients
for male, female, and total reproductive
success when the effects of opening date
and height were held constant (although
they were not statistically significant
after Bonferroni correction). In this
population, no relationship with any of
the success measures was apparent in the
univariate analysis. Taller plants were
both more successful and tended to have
a longer labellum. Thus, the negative
direct effect of labellum length was
masked in the univariate analysis by its
positive correlation with height, which
was associated with greater success. The
negative correlational selection
gradient for female success showed that
the most successful plants combined
greater height with a smaller labellum.
The negative relation between labellum
length and reproductive success did not
result from any tendency for smaller
flowers to occur in the best
microhabitats. Instead, it is possible
that a larger labellum does not
constrain a pollinator to brush against
a pollinium or stigma with sufficient
force to ensure pollen transfer.
Conclusions
In this study, we found selection for
earlier opening flowers, taller plants,
and smaller flowers. In contrast to the
commonly hypothesized antagonism between
pollen receipt and dispersal, selection
acted similarly through male and female
pollination success. These effects of
phenology and morphology, however, were
overwhelmed by environmental variation.
Incorporation of environmental effects
on fitness is not necessary for the
quantification of selection, but results
in a fuller understanding of the causes
of fitness variation and permits a test
of the hypothesis that morphological
selection is weak because of
environmental variation.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank J. H. M. Willison and
A. Wilson (latter of the Nova Scotia
Museum) for pointing out the Long Lake
and Hemlock Ravine populations,
respectively; and K. Mavraganis, S.
Armbruster, P. Wilson, and an anonymous
reviewer for detailed comments on the
manuscript. This research was supported
by a Sarah Lawson Scholarship to L. M.
O'Connell, and grants from the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research
Council and the Research Development
Fund in the Sciences (Dalhousie
University) to M. O. Johnston.
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