2005
DOI: 10.1080/0028825x.2005.9512943
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Progress in understanding pollination systems in New Zealand

Abstract: Pollination in New Zealand, an isolated oceanic archipelago in the Southern Hemisphere, has previously been characterised as having low rates of self-incompatibility and a lack of specialised pollination, as well as little pollinator dependence. These features have been interpreted as supportive of "Baker's Rule", which suggests that long-distance colonisation selects for breeding systems that do not require biparental mating. However, we show that recent studies of the angiosperm flora reveal sexual systems (… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

5
98
1

Year Published

2011
2011
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
7
2

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 107 publications
(104 citation statements)
references
References 221 publications
(409 reference statements)
5
98
1
Order By: Relevance
“…This diversification, combined with the fact that the New Zealand flora has an unusually high proportion of plant species with small, pale-coloured flowers (Godley 1979;Lloyd 1985;Campbell et al 2010), has led to the longheld assumption that moth pollination might be particularly important in New Zealand (e.g. Thomson 1881Thomson , 1928Heine 1937;Burrows 1960;Primack 1978Primack , 1983Godley 1979;Lloyd 1985;Robertson 1989;Newstrom & Robertson 2005;Merrett et al 2007;Pattemore & Wilcove 2012;Pattemore & Anderson 2013;Gardner-Gee et al 2014). However, there are little quantitative data to support this assumption.…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This diversification, combined with the fact that the New Zealand flora has an unusually high proportion of plant species with small, pale-coloured flowers (Godley 1979;Lloyd 1985;Campbell et al 2010), has led to the longheld assumption that moth pollination might be particularly important in New Zealand (e.g. Thomson 1881Thomson , 1928Heine 1937;Burrows 1960;Primack 1978Primack , 1983Godley 1979;Lloyd 1985;Robertson 1989;Newstrom & Robertson 2005;Merrett et al 2007;Pattemore & Wilcove 2012;Pattemore & Anderson 2013;Gardner-Gee et al 2014). However, there are little quantitative data to support this assumption.…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Primack (1983) is often cited as providing experimental evidence of pollination interactions in New Zealand, but he made no attempt to determine whether the insects observed were actually carrying pollen on their body. Owing largely to observational studies of floral visitation such as those of Primack (1979Primack ( , 1983, New Zealand's pollination systems have been characterised as highly generalised with extensive pollinator sharing, and unpredictable and imprecise pollinator services (Thomson 1928;Primack 1978Primack , 1983Lloyd 1985;Newstrom & Robertson 2005;Ollerton et al 2009). However, detailed experimental work has revealed discriminating foraging patterns by native insects, differences in effectiveness among insect taxa and thus more floral specialisation than previously thought (Bischoff 2008;Campbell et al 2010;Bischoff et al 2013;Miller et al in review).…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These shifts from morphologically ornithophilous syndromes to insect-or self-pollinated syndromes and from bilateral to radial symmetry are likely the result of pollinator selection. Lloyd (1985) noted that many New Zealand plants have small, pale flowers that he considered despecialized in relation to overseas relatives; he considered low pollinator numbers and unique pollinator assemblages (particularly a lack of long-tongued bees) as the basis for selection of the generalized pollination syndrome seen in many New Zealand flowers (but see Newstrom and Robertson 2005). Carpenter et al (2003) found a dominance of small, actinomorphic (often dishlike), white or pale-colored flowers in a study of 123 tropical tree species in New Caledonia and considered that the limited availability of specialist pollinators was a major factor in the selection for generalist flowers there.…”
Section: Pollination Seed Dispersal and Flower And Fruit Morphologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies of incompatibility using the Lundqvist (1961) petri dish technique as well as hand pollination on intact flowers revealed that all showed self pollen tube growth down to the base of the style and seed set on self-pollination. Thus, these Schoenus species can be added to the list of self-compatible New Zealand angiosperms adding support to the general consensus that self-incompatibility is relatively infrequent in the indigenous and endemic flora (Webb & Kelly 1993;Newstrom & Robertson 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%