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The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens

Erica is the largest genus in the Cape Florisitic Region (CFR) boasting a diverse range of floral morphology and pollination systems. Even though it is such a diverse genus, there is minimal research examining the pollination biology of specific species. This research inspects the pollination biolog...

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Main Author: Dignon, Niki
Other Authors: Midgley, Jeremy J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dignon, Niki
author2 Midgley, Jeremy J
author_browse Dignon, Niki
Midgley, Jeremy J
author_facet Midgley, Jeremy J
Dignon, Niki
author_sort Dignon, Niki
collection Thesis
description Erica is the largest genus in the Cape Florisitic Region (CFR) boasting a diverse range of floral morphology and pollination systems. Even though it is such a diverse genus, there is minimal research examining the pollination biology of specific species. This research inspects the pollination biology of Erica pudens. To do this we carried out pollinator exclusions, hand pollination experiments, rodent trapping, camera observations and pollen/ovule counts. This research also establishes whether E. pudens is another example of convergent evolution in Erica by establishing its phylogenetic position. E. pudens possesses floral characteristics that are consistent with the rodent-pollination syndrome. These characteristics include tightly-packed, pendulous inflorescences with a prostrate habit, found close to the floor, with a dull flower colour and winter flowering times. This research also found that E. pudens offers a high volume of nectar per floral head (up to 20.9μl) with a comparably high sugar concentration (23.7%). Even though these characteristics suggested rodent-pollination, there was no other evidence that conclusively demonstrated this. Only three rodents were captured, and few pollen tetrads were found in the faeces of the two Rhabdomys pumilio individuals (average of 13 and 1 respectively). There was very little footage captured of rodent activity around E. pudens flowers and none to demonstrate the foraging activities of a potential pollinator. The exclusion of pollinators showed no significant difference in swollen ovule dimensions between bagged flowers and caged flowers. Breeding experiments showed no significant difference between self-pollinated flowers and cross-pollinated flowers. These results suggested no need for a pollinator and the ability of E. pudens to undergo self-pollination. This could be an example of pollinator failure (due to small rodent populations) and the consequent evolution of self-pollination. The phylogenetic studies showed that E. pudens was another example of convergent evolution within Erica.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:01.081Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14122 The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens Dignon, Niki Midgley, Jeremy J Biological Sciences Erica is the largest genus in the Cape Florisitic Region (CFR) boasting a diverse range of floral morphology and pollination systems. Even though it is such a diverse genus, there is minimal research examining the pollination biology of specific species. This research inspects the pollination biology of Erica pudens. To do this we carried out pollinator exclusions, hand pollination experiments, rodent trapping, camera observations and pollen/ovule counts. This research also establishes whether E. pudens is another example of convergent evolution in Erica by establishing its phylogenetic position. E. pudens possesses floral characteristics that are consistent with the rodent-pollination syndrome. These characteristics include tightly-packed, pendulous inflorescences with a prostrate habit, found close to the floor, with a dull flower colour and winter flowering times. This research also found that E. pudens offers a high volume of nectar per floral head (up to 20.9μl) with a comparably high sugar concentration (23.7%). Even though these characteristics suggested rodent-pollination, there was no other evidence that conclusively demonstrated this. Only three rodents were captured, and few pollen tetrads were found in the faeces of the two Rhabdomys pumilio individuals (average of 13 and 1 respectively). There was very little footage captured of rodent activity around E. pudens flowers and none to demonstrate the foraging activities of a potential pollinator. The exclusion of pollinators showed no significant difference in swollen ovule dimensions between bagged flowers and caged flowers. Breeding experiments showed no significant difference between self-pollinated flowers and cross-pollinated flowers. These results suggested no need for a pollinator and the ability of E. pudens to undergo self-pollination. This could be an example of pollinator failure (due to small rodent populations) and the consequent evolution of self-pollination. The phylogenetic studies showed that E. pudens was another example of convergent evolution within Erica. 2015-09-30T13:24:48Z 2015-09-30T13:24:48Z 2013 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14122 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Dignon, Niki
The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
title_full The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
title_fullStr The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
title_full_unstemmed The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
title_short The Reproductive biology of Erica pudens
title_sort reproductive biology of erica pudens
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14122
work_keys_str_mv AT dignonniki thereproductivebiologyofericapudens
AT dignonniki reproductivebiologyofericapudens