2025-04-212025-04-212024Valle García, J.C.d., León Osper, M., Domínguez González, C., Buide, M., Arista Palmero, M., Ortiz Ballesteros, P.L.,...,Narbona, E. (2024). Green Flowers Need Yellow to get Noticed in a Green World. Annals of Botany, 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcae213.1095-82900305-7364https://hdl.handle.net/11441/171870Background and Aims Flower colour is a key feature in plant–pollinator interactions that makes the flowers visible amid the surrounding green vegetation. Green flowers are expected to be scarcely conspicuous to pollinators; however, many of them are visited by pollinators even in the absence of other traits that might attract pollinators (e.g. floral scents). In this study, we investigate how entomophilous species with green flowers are perceived by pollinators. Methods We obtained reflectance spectra data of 30 European species that display green or green–yellow flowers to the human eye. These data were used to perform spectral analyses, to calculate both chromatic (colour contrast against the background) and achromatic (colour contrast that relies on the signals from the green-sensitive photoreceptors) cues and to model colour perception by hymenopterans (bees) and dipterans (flies). Key Results The visibility of green flowers to bees and flies (i.e. their chromatic contrast values) was lower compared with other floral colours commonly pollinated by these insects, whereas green–yellow flowers were as conspicuous as the other flower colours. Green flowers with low chromatic contrast values exhibited higher achromatic contrast, which is used to detect distant flowers at narrow visual angles, than green–yellow flowers. Additionally, the marker points (i.e. sharp transition in floral reflectance that aids pollinators in locating them) of green and green–yellow flowers aligned to some degree with the colour discrimination abilities of bees and flies. Conclusions We found that many entomophilous green and green–yellow flowers are conspicuous to bees and flies through their chromatic or achromatic contrasts. Although acquiring pigments such as carotenoids, which impart a yellowish hue to flowers and enhance their visibility to pollinators, could increase their conspicuousness, the metabolic costs of pigment production, along with the use of alternative strategies to attract pollinators, might have constrained carotenoid emergence in certain lineages of green-flowered species.application/pdf12 p.engAttribution 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Chromatic contrastFlower conspicuousnessGreen flowersPlant–pollinator interactionReflectance spectraVisual modellingYellowish hueGreen Flowers Need Yellow to get Noticed in a Green Worldinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess10.1093/aob/mcae213