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Makeover for Plants
Plants that team with specific pollinators-hummingbirds
or bees-evolve to heighten their appeal, according to a student
at Duke University in Durham North Carolina. This goes against
the theory that plants get stuck with their look once they
become associated with a particular pollinator. The study
suggests that plants have more evolutionary flexibility than
previously thought. Pollination mechanisms in 115 species
of Ruellia was studied. There was little evidence to suggest
that Ruellia species pollinated by hawkmoths or bats have
ever reverted to the more general strategy of catering to
bees or other insects. But there appeared to be between 8
and 11 transitions from hummingbirds in favour of insects.
Source : Down To Earth,
September, 2008

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