Pollinator‐Mediated Interactions Affect Patterns of Selection on Floral Traits of Co‐Flowering Plants
Yan Ma, Xiaoli Wang, Yizhi Qiu, Zhigang Zhao

TL;DR
Removing a dominant flowering plant in an alpine meadow intensifies selection on flower traits of other plants, showing how community changes affect evolution.
Contribution
Demonstrates how the loss of a dominant plant species alters selection on floral traits of co-flowering plants.
Findings
Removing R. tanguticus increased pollen receipt for A. obtusiloba and A. souliei.
Flower attractive traits faced stronger selection when R. tanguticus was removed.
P. fragarioides and T. lanceolata experienced stronger selection on flower size.
Abstract
The importance of species interactions in shaping the evolution of ecological communities is well established, as they can significantly alter biotic selection. Pollinator‐mediated plant–plant interactions on plant reproductive performance can vary from facilitation to competition. Although the richness and density of co‐flowering species influence patterns of selection, the role of key species in an ecological community remains unclear. We experimentally removed flowers of a dominant flowering species, Ranunculus tanguticus, in an alpine meadow on the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau, and examined how this dominant affected fitness components and phenotypic selection on floral traits of five neighboring species via stigmatic pollen load. R. tanguticus had a positive effect on the pollen receipt of two plant species, A. obtusiloba and A. souliei . Correspondingly, flower attractive traits…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Plant Parasitism and Resistance
