# Birds, Bats or Climate? Eucalypt Floral Traits Reflect Pollination Over Abiotic Environment

**Authors:** R. E. Stephens, H. Sauquet, B. Laugier, C. R. Gosper, R. V. Gallagher

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71449 · 2025-06-11

## TL;DR

Eucalypt flower size and color are shaped more by pollinators like birds than by climate or soil conditions.

## Contribution

The study shows that pollination environment, especially the absence of bats, strongly influences eucalypt floral traits.

## Key findings

- Larger, colorful eucalypt flowers are linked to the absence of flower-visiting bats.
- Flower size and color evolved together in eucalypts, not due to climate or soil.
- Small, white-cream flowers are associated with generalist pollination strategies.

## Abstract

Flowers and their traits vary greatly across species, influenced by biotic and abiotic environmental variation. We explore the relative effects of pollination and abiotic environment on flower size and colour in a species‐rich tree clade (eucalypts: Eucalyptus, Corymbia and Angophora). Most eucalypt flowers are small and white‐cream with generalised pollination systems. Though larger, more colourful (i.e., red, pink, orange, yellow or green) eucalypt flowers occur more frequently in southwest Australia, it remains unclear what environmental factors contribute to this pattern. We extracted bud size (as a proxy for flower size) and flower colour (as white‐cream or colourful) for 798 eucalypt species from online floras. We assessed three measures of vertebrate pollination environment—flower‐visiting bird species richness, flower‐visiting marsupial presence/absence, and flower‐visiting bat presence/absence—and three measures of abiotic environment—mean annual temperature, mean annual precipitation, and soil available phosphorus. We show that flower size and colour have evolved in tandem in eucalypts and are not well predicted by contemporary climate or soil environments. Instead, pollination environment, and particularly the absence of flower‐visiting bats, was the strongest predictor of eucalypt flower size and colour. Larger, more colourful eucalypt flowers may have evolved to attract bird pollinators in landscapes where bats are not available to carry pollen long distances. Small, white‐cream eucalypt flowers, conversely, may represent a successful generalist pollination syndrome where insects, bats, birds, and/or marsupials all contribute to pollination. Continental‐scale patterns of floral trait variation thus reflect macroecological patterns in pollinator availability, revealing elements of the biotic environment that may shape plant reproductive strategies.

Flower colour and size have evolved in tandem in the eucalypts, with larger and more colourful flowers arising multiple times in southwest Western Australia. Eucalypt flower size and colour are more strongly associated with the vertebrate pollination environment—especially the absence of flower‐visiting bats—than with climatic or soil conditions.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Eucalyptus (taxon 3932), Corymbia (taxon 87658), Angophora (taxon 22531)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** phosphorus (MESH:D010758)
- **Species:** Bacillus sp. AT (species) [taxon 1196779], Corymbia (genus) [taxon 157310], Chiroptera (bats, order) [taxon 9397], Eucalyptus (genus) [taxon 3932]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12152646/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12152646