It's not easy being blue: Are there olfactory and visual trade-offs in plant signalling?

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Date
2015
Volume
10
Issue
6
Journal
PLoS One
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Book Title
Publisher
San Francisco, CA : Public Library of Science
Abstract

Understanding the signals used by plants to attract seed disperses is a pervasive quest in evolutionary and sensory biology. Fruit size, colour, and odour variation have long been discussed in the controversial context of dispersal syndromes targeting olfactory-oriented versus visually-oriented foragers. Trade-offs in signal investment could impose important physiological constraints on plants, yet have been largely ignored. Here, we measure the reflectance and volatile organic compounds of a community of Malagasy plants and our results indicate that extant plant signals may represent a trade-off between olfactory and chromatic signals. Blue pigments are the most visually-effective – blue is a colour that is visually salient to all known seed dispersing animals within the study system. Additionally, plants with blue-reflecting fruits are less odiferous than plants that reflect primarily in other regions of the colour spectrum.

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Citation
Valenta, K., Brown, K. A., Melin, A. D., Monckton, S. K., Styler, S. A., Jackson, D. A., & Chapman, C. A. (2015). It’s not easy being blue: Are there olfactory and visual trade-offs in plant signalling? (San Francisco, CA : Public Library of Science). San Francisco, CA : Public Library of Science. https://doi.org//10.1371/journal.pone.0131725
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported