# Floral scent of artificial hybrids between two Schiedea species that share a moth pollinator

**Authors:** John M. Powers, Stephen G. Weller, Ann K. Sakai, Diane R. Campbell

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.70065 · American Journal of Botany · 2025-06-29

## TL;DR

This study examines how hybrid flowers between two Schiedea species affect moth pollinators by analyzing their scent and attraction behavior.

## Contribution

The study reveals how hybrid floral scent blends influence pollinator attraction in sympatric Schiedea species.

## Key findings

- Hybrid flowers emit a blend of volatiles from both parent species, often at non-additive rates.
- Moths preferred inflorescences augmented with the scent of S. kaalae flowers over unaltered ones.
- Hybrid scent blends can attract moths even with intermediate compound ratios.

## Abstract

In flowering plants, pollinators' ability to recognize chemical displays of hybrids may erode reproductive barriers. Hybrids may produce novel or altered floral scent blends that are unattractive, or scents similar to either parent that remain attractive and promote backcrossing. We characterized the floral scent of hybrids of sympatric species with a shared pollinator and tested whether scent is sufficient for pollinator attraction.

Floral volatiles of artificial F1 hybrids between Hawaiian Schiedea kaalae and S. hookeri (Caryophyllaceae) were characterized by dynamic headspace sampling and GC‐MS. Behavioral choice tests with the native moth Pseudoschrankia brevipalpis measured the effect of adding S. kaalae scent (with flowers bagged to remove visual cues) to inflorescences of relatively unattractive wind‐pollinated relatives (S. kealiae and S. globosa) from the same island.

Most hybrids produced a combination of the distinct sets of floral volatiles from each parent at rates of emission that often differed from the expectation under completely additive inheritance. Floral scent did not depend on cross direction, and no novel compounds were detected in hybrids. Pseudoschrankia brevipalpis preferred inflorescences of S. globosa and S. kealiae that were augmented with the scent of hidden S. kaalae flowers.

Intermediate hybrid floral scent blends could potentially attract moths if they do not rely on precise compound ratios. Moth attraction to the floral scent of S. kaalae flowers indicates that moths can discriminate the floral scent of this species against a background of volatiles and visual cues from wind‐pollinated relatives, showing the importance of scent variation in this genus.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Schiedea kaalae (taxon 270420), Schiedea hookeri (taxon 270411), Schiedea kealiae (taxon 270422), Schiedea globosa (taxon 270405), Pseudoschrankia brevipalpis (taxon 1676191)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Schiedea kaalae (species) [taxon 270420], Sphaerochaeta globosa (species) [taxon 1131703], Pseudoschrankia brevipalpis (species) [taxon 1676191], Schiedea kealiae (species) [taxon 270422]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12281260/full.md

## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12281260/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12281260