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Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)

Floral morphology and its relationship to pollination syndromes is examined, for the genera Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae). These two genera have similar vegetative morphologies and share the same mode of seed dispersal (anemogeochory). They differ in their floral and inflorescence structu...

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Main Author: Raimondo, Domitilla C
Other Authors: Linder, H Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Raimondo, Domitilla C
author2 Linder, H Peter
author_browse Linder, H Peter
Raimondo, Domitilla C
author_facet Linder, H Peter
Raimondo, Domitilla C
author_sort Raimondo, Domitilla C
collection Thesis
description Floral morphology and its relationship to pollination syndromes is examined, for the genera Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae). These two genera have similar vegetative morphologies and share the same mode of seed dispersal (anemogeochory). They differ in their floral and inflorescence structures. The species Brunsvigia bosmaniae and Crossyne flava are chosen as representative species of the two genera Brunsvigia and Crossyne. Floral morphology is studied in relationship to an outgroup species Nerine humilis. Pollination syndrome, ability to self-pollinate, levels of natural seed set and patterns of seed dispersal are studied so that reproductive strategies pf the two species can be compared. Crossyne flava is pollinated by a suite of small diurnal insects and can be considered to have a generalist pollination syndrome. The first observation of pollination by moths in Brunsvigia bosmaniae is reported. I show that neither species is able to self, hence pollination events are important. Experimental manipulation reveals that Brunsvigia bosmaniae is pollinator limited. Although this experimental manipulation was not possible for Crossyne flava, high seed set levels in Crossyne flava suggests that levels of pollination are high in Crossyne and low for Brunsvigia. The amount of pollination that takes place is shown to be closely related to floral morphology. Floral divergence of the two genera is thus proposed to be the result of adaptation to a pollinator driven selective regime.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:27.383Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
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:11427/25785 Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae) Raimondo, Domitilla C Linder, H Peter Snijman, D A Botany Floral morphology and its relationship to pollination syndromes is examined, for the genera Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae). These two genera have similar vegetative morphologies and share the same mode of seed dispersal (anemogeochory). They differ in their floral and inflorescence structures. The species Brunsvigia bosmaniae and Crossyne flava are chosen as representative species of the two genera Brunsvigia and Crossyne. Floral morphology is studied in relationship to an outgroup species Nerine humilis. Pollination syndrome, ability to self-pollinate, levels of natural seed set and patterns of seed dispersal are studied so that reproductive strategies pf the two species can be compared. Crossyne flava is pollinated by a suite of small diurnal insects and can be considered to have a generalist pollination syndrome. The first observation of pollination by moths in Brunsvigia bosmaniae is reported. I show that neither species is able to self, hence pollination events are important. Experimental manipulation reveals that Brunsvigia bosmaniae is pollinator limited. Although this experimental manipulation was not possible for Crossyne flava, high seed set levels in Crossyne flava suggests that levels of pollination are high in Crossyne and low for Brunsvigia. The amount of pollination that takes place is shown to be closely related to floral morphology. Floral divergence of the two genera is thus proposed to be the result of adaptation to a pollinator driven selective regime. 2017-10-25T08:30:23Z 2017-10-25T08:30:23Z 1998 2017-02-20T07:43:29Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25785 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Raimondo, Domitilla C
Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
title_full Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
title_fullStr Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
title_short Evolution of floral morphology in Brunsvigia and Crossyne (Amaryllidaceae)
title_sort evolution of floral morphology in brunsvigia and crossyne amaryllidaceae
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25785
work_keys_str_mv AT raimondodomitillac evolutionoffloralmorphologyinbrunsvigiaandcrossyneamaryllidaceae