“…In Australia, several orchid genera have some sexually deceptive species which exhibit this tissue-specific contrast (e.g., within Caladenia , Calochilus ), and in some genera, this is exclusively the case (e.g., Drakaea , Cryptostylis , Paracaleana , Leporella , Caleana ) ( Gaskett, 2011 ). Other examples of tissue-specific dark colors in sexually deceptive species outside Australia are the dark labella of many Ophrys species ( Bradshaw et al, 2010 ) such as Ophrys speculum ( Figure 1F ), the maroon-black callus structure on the pink labellum of Serapias lingua ( Vereecken et al, 2012 ; Pellegrino et al, 2017 ), the large elongated dark maroon labellum of Asian beetle-pollinated Luisia teres ( Arakaki et al, 2016 ), the triangular-shaped dark maroon pigmentation on the labellum of bee-pollinated Mormolyca ringens ( Singer et al, 2004 ), the central dark maroon labellum and column on an otherwise bright yellow corolla of Telipogon peruvianus ( Martel et al, 2016 , 2019 ), a combination of dark maroon-colored floral structures including antennae-like petals, anther, and labellum of south African beetle-pollinated Disa forficaria orchids ( Cohen et al, 2021 ), and the raised black spots on the yellow to bright orange ray florets of some fly pollinated Gorteria diffusa ( Ellis and Johnson, 2010 ) morphotypes ( Figure 1G ). In these cases, the dark pigmentation likely serves several key purposes important for pollination, including mimicking the color of female insects, providing strong chromatic and achromatic contrast, and aiding the exploitation of pollinator sensory biases.…”