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How Much Pigment Should Flowers Have? Flowers With Moderate Pigmentation Have Highest Color Contrast

Casper J. van der Kooi

2021Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Floral pigments are a core component of flower colors, but how much pigment a flower should have to yield a strong visual signal to pollinators is unknown. Using an optical model and taking white, blue, yellow and red flowers as case studies, I investigate how the amount of pigment determines a flower’s color contrast. Modeled reflectance spectra are interpreted using established insect color vision models. Contrast as a function of the amount of pigment shows a pattern of diminishing return. Low pigment amounts yield pale colors, intermediate amounts yield high contrast, and extreme amounts of pigment do not further increase, and sometimes even decrease, a flower’s color contrast. An intermediate amount of floral pigment thus yields the highest visibility, a finding that is corroborated by previous behavioral experiments on bees. The implications for studies on plant-pollinator signaling, intraspecific flower color variation and the costs of flower color are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

PigmentPollinatorColor contrastBiologyBotanyContrast (vision)Yield (engineering)PollinationHorticultureChemistryOpticsPollenMaterials sciencePhysicsArtificial intelligenceMetallurgyOrganic chemistryComputer sciencePlant and animal studiesInsect and Pesticide ResearchPlant Parasitism and Resistance
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