Flower colour and size-signals vary with altitude and resulting climate on the tropical-subtropical islands of Taiwan

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Feb 1:15:1304849. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1304849. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

The diversity of flower colours in nature provides quantifiable evidence for how visitations by colour sensing insect pollinators can drive the evolution of angiosperm visual signalling. Recent research shows that both biotic and abiotic factors may influence flower signalling, and that harsher climate conditions may also promote salient signalling to entice scarcer pollinators to visit. In parallel, a more sophisticated appreciation of the visual task foragers face reveals that bees have a complex visual system that uses achromatic vision when moving fast, whilst colour vision requires slower, more careful inspection of targets. Spectra of 714 native flowering species across Taiwan from sea level to mountainous regions 3,300 m above sea level (a.s.l.) were measured. We modelled how the visual system of key bee pollinators process signals, including flower size. By using phylogenetically informed analyses, we observed that at lower altitudes including foothills and submontane landscapes, there is a significant relationship between colour contrast and achromatic signals. Overall, the frequency of flowers with high colour contrast increases with altitude, whilst flower size decreases. The evidence that flower colour signaling becomes increasingly salient in higher altitude conditions supports that abiotic factors influence pollinator foraging in a way that directly influences how flowering plants need to advertise.

Keywords: colour contrast; flora; flower colour; green contrast; insect; islands; vision.

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.63xsj3v08

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by the National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan (Grant no. NSTC 111-2313-B-002-027-MY2), to C-NW. MS, and AJ were partially funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education (BMBF) grant number 031B1067C. AD was partially funded by the Australian Research Council Discovery Projects grant DP160100161 and is currently supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA2386-23-1-4063.