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Why Petals? Naïve, but Not Experienced Bees, Preferentially Visit Flowers with Larger Visual Signals

Biology

Why Petals? Naïve, but Not Experienced Bees, Preferentially Visit Flowers with Larger Visual Signals

N. J. Balfour and F. L. W. Ratnieks

Discover how showy petals play a pivotal role in attracting naive flower-visitors! In an intriguing study by Nicholas J Balfour and Francis L W Ratnieks, the authors manipulate flower features to explore the behavior of bees when faced with different floral signals. The findings reveal that these vibrant structures are essential in enticing first-time pollinators, paving the way for further research in this captivating area of floral evolution.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Flower evolution includes a range of questions concerning the function of showy morphological features such as petals. Despite extensive research on the role of petals in attracting pollinators, there has been little experimental testing of their importance in attracting naïve versus experienced flower-visitors. In an exploratory field study, we manipulated the ray petals of inflorescences of two garden flowers, Rudbeckia hirta and Helenium autumnale, to test the hypothesis that these showy structures primarily function to attract first-time, naïve, visitors. On their first inflorescence visit to both species, naïve honey bees and bumble bees were more likely to visit intact inflorescences, than those with ray petals removed. However, by the tenth consecutive inflorescence on the same visit to the flower patch, test insects showed no preference. A positive correlation was observed between the visitation of inflorescences with zero petals and inflorescence number on both study plants, for both bees. These results suggest that a key function of showy petals is to attract naïve, first-time visitors. Similar to how a restaurant attracts diners with a large sign, showy signals may be vital to enticing first-time visitors when competing with other establishments or plants for customers or pollinators. We hope the findings of this exploratory study will stimulate further work in this area.
Publisher
Insects
Published On
Jan 26, 2023
Authors
Nicholas J Balfour, Francis L W Ratnieks
Tags
flower evolution
petals
pollinators
naive visitors
bee behavior
Rudbeckia hirta
Helenium autumnale
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