Sucrose digestion capacity in birds shows convergent coevolution with nectar composition across continents
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Date
Authors
McWhorter, Todd J.
Rader, Jonathan A.
Schondube, Jorge E.
Nicolson, Sue W.
Pinshow, Berry
Fleming, Patricia A.
Gutierrez-Guerrero, Yocelyn T.
Del Rio, Carlos Martınez
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cell Press
Abstract
The major lineages of nectar-feeding birds (hummingbirds, sunbirds, honeyeaters, flowerpiercers, and lorikeets) are considered examples of convergent evolution. We compared sucrose digestion capacity and sucrase enzymatic activity per unit intestinal surface area among 50 avian species from the New World, Africa, and Australia, including 20 nectarivores. With some exceptions, nectarivores had smaller intestinal surfaces, higher sucrose hydrolysis capacity, and greater sucrase activity per unit intestinal area. Convergence analysis showed high values for sucrose hydrolysis and sucrase activity per unit intestinal surface area in specialist nectarivores, matching the high proportion of sucrose in the nectar of the plants they pollinate. Plants pollinated by generalist nectar-feeding birds in the Old and New Worlds secrete nectar in which glucose and fructose are the dominant sugars. Matching intestinal enzyme activity in birds and nectar composition in flowers appears to be an example of convergent coevolution between plants and pollinators on an intercontinental scale.
Description
Keywords
Sucrose, Digestion, Birds, Continents, Nectar-feeding birds
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
McWhorter, T.J., Rader, J.A., Schondube, J.E. et al. 2021, 'Sucrose digestion capacity in birds shows convergent coevolution with nectar composition across continents', iScience, vol. 24, art. 102717, pp. 1-14.