Convergent evolution: floral guides, stingless bee nest entrances, and insectivorous pitchers |
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Authors: | Jacobus C Biesmeijer Martin Giurfa Dirk Koedam Simon G Potts Daniel M Joel Amots Dafni |
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Institution: | Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK. j.c.biesmeijer@leeds.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | Several recent hypotheses, including sensory drive and sensory exploitation, suggest that receiver biases may drive selection
of biological signals in the context of sexual selection. Here we suggest that a similar mechanism may have led to convergence
of patterns in flowers, stingless bee nest entrances, and pitchers of insectivorous plants. A survey of these non-related
visual stimuli shows that they share features such as stripes, dark centre, and peripheral dots. Next, we experimentally show
that in stingless bees the close-up approach to a flower is guided by dark centre preference. Moreover, in the approach towards
their nest entrance, they have a spontaneous preference for entrance patterns containing a dark centre and disrupted ornamentation.
Together with existing empirical evidence on the honeybee's and other insects’ orientation to flowers, this suggests that
the signal receivers of the natural patterns we examined, mainly Hymenoptera, have spontaneous preferences for radiating stripes,
dark centres, and peripheral dots. These receiver biases may have evolved in other behavioural contexts in the ancestors of
Hymenoptera, but our findings suggest that they have triggered the convergent evolution of visual stimuli in floral guides,
stingless bee nest entrances, and insectivorous pitchers. |
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