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In nursery pollination mutualisms, which are usually obligate interactions, olfactory attraction of pollinators by floral volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is the main step in guaranteeing
partner encounter. However, mechanisms ensuring the evolutionary stability of dioecious fig–pollinator mutualisms, in which female fig trees engage in pollination by deceit resulting in zero
reproductive success of pollinators that visit them, are poorly understood. In dioecious figs, individuals of each sex should be selected to produce odours that their pollinating wasps
cannot distinguish, especially since pollinators have usually only one choice of a nursery during their lifetime. To test the hypothesis of intersexual chemical mimicry, VOCs emitted by
pollen-receptive figs of seven dioecious species were compared using headspace collection and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. First, fig-flower scents varied significantly
among species, allowing host-species recognition. Second, in species in which male and female figs are synchronous, intersexual VOC variation was not significant. However, in species where
figs of both sexes flower asynchronously, intersexual variation of VOCs was detectable. Finally, with one exception, there was no sexual dimorphism in scent quantity. We show that there are
two ways to use scent to be a dioecious fig based on differences in flowering synchrony between the sexes.
Among the sexual strategies to avoid inbreeding in flowering plants, sexual dimorphism promotes the evolution of dioecy1. The transition from monoecy to dioecy in plants is an important
event in the evolution of angiosperms2, with dioecious species occurring in half of all plant families but representing only 6–7% of all species3. In clades with a large number of dioecious
species, Vamosi and Vamosi4 found a higher extinction rate as well as a lower speciation rate than in their non-dioecious sister clades, a difference that may be explained by the strong
sexual dimorphism displayed by dioecious species. Indeed, one of the consequences of such sexual specialization is that reward levels to pollinators often differ between male and female
flowers as a result of sexual selection5. Such specialization leads, in some cases, to cheating by one deceptive sex, which can be either male or female6. In such deceptive pollination
systems, signals are key factors in maintaining the interaction7. For the deceptive sex it is crucial to maintain signals that mimic the signals of the rewarding sex in order to attract
pollinators and ensure mating success, thereby maximizing the fitness of both sexes. Among these signals, while floral scents (i.e. bouquets of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted by
flowers) are often crucial signals for pollinator attraction8,9, they may be among the most variable traits of the plant phenotype10. However, some cases of strong stabilizing selection on
floral scent exist11,12. Despite the potential for variable evolutionary trajectories, floral scents in dioecious species have been much less studied than other floral traits in the context
of sexual dimorphism5.
In nursery pollination mutualisms, which are highly species-specific interactions where reproduction of the partners is completely inter-dependent, chemical signals are crucial in partner
encounter13. To ensure effective partner encounter, selection should act both on the specific volatile signals emitted by the host plant and on the capacity of the pollinating insect to
detect their message, ensuring effective communication. More than half of the nursery pollination systems described so far involve dioecious species13,14. They thus provide excellent systems
to study the constraints imposed on plants and pollinators, as well as the strong necessity for inter-sexual resemblance in these signals when the sexes are separate and offer different
rewards to their pollinators. In fact, there are many dioecious species where the chemical composition of scents of the rewardless sex – often the females – is similar to those of male
plants, supporting the predictions of the intersexual mimicry hypothesis5,15. However, sexual dimorphism in scent composition also exists in several dioecious species5. In addition,
dimorphism in floral scents may also be due to variation in the quantity of emitted VOCs with one sex, very often the males, having higher VOC emission rates5.
With more than 300 dioecious species, the genus Ficus (Moraceae) provides an excellent opportunity to test the intersexual mimicry hypothesis of floral scents in nursery pollination
mutualisms, since all Ficus display strategies of pollinator attraction strongly based on chemical mediation. Nearly every fig species is usually obligatorily pollinated by a single species
of fig wasp (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea: Agaonidae), which can only reproduce within the host fig16. The female pollinator wasps locate figs of the host by species-specific bouquets of VOC
attractants produced by figs at receptivity, i.e. the developmental stage during which the stigmas are ready for pollination17,18,19. Dioecious figs represent a special case of pollination
by deceit with fatal consequences for female wasps that enter female figs; such wasps will have zero reproductive success, for the following reasons. Dioecious fig species are anatomically
gynodioecious, with true female trees and hermaphrodite but functionally male trees. Figs of male trees bear male and female flowers, but their short-styled female flowers serve only as
brood sites for pollinators and never develop into seeds16,20. Female fig wasps enter male figs to lay eggs in the ovaries and then die. Some weeks later, the mature wasp offspring emerge
and mate within the fig; the female wasps then exit their natal fig, loaded with pollen, and search for receptive figs in which to lay eggs. The male figs therefore produce pollen and
pollinator wasps, but no seeds. The flowers of female figs, on the other hand, have long styles: female wasps can pollinate them but cannot lay eggs21. As a result, a pollinator wasp (which
lives only for a few hours) entering a female fig dies without leaving any offspring; hence female figs produce only seeds. In other words, in the dioecious fig–pollinator wasp mutualism,
the pollinating wasps pay a very high fitness price when entering a female fig. Thus, selection should favour wasps that choose to avoid female figs and only enter male figs (in which they
reproduce). However, this “simple” behavioural shift in turn would lead to the end of fig seed production and to a breakdown of the dioecious system in figs15.
Different hypotheses have been erected to explain why this conflict has not caused the mutualism between fig wasps and fig trees to dissolve under dioecy22. One explanation for why wasps
enter female figs is that, in some dioecious fig species, they have no option other than to enter female figs. In seasonally reproducing species such as F. carica23, male trees in a
population are simultaneously receptive, but this is well before or after the synchronized receptivity of the female trees. Wasps that exit male figs during the time of synchronous female
receptivity have no choice, and due to strong chemically mediated species-recognition mechanisms based on chemical signals13, they will be attracted to the deceptive female figs. The wasp
population in these species is maintained by the emergence of a few wasps, at the end of the period of female flowering, which enter some of the few male figs that are receptive at that time
and in which they can reproduce20,24.
However, in most dioecious fig species, male and female trees are frequently receptive at the same time (synchronous flowering), and the “no available choice” hypothesis does not apply.
Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the persistence of the mutualism in such dioecious fig species. Among them is “selection to rush”: sexual dimorphism could exist in some fig
species, as in other dioecious species5, but due to the very short lifespan of the pollinating fig wasps25, they cannot afford the time to choose fig sex: thus, based on the strong host
species recognition mechanism, they should enter the first fig encountered because any extra time spent in choosing fig sex increases the risks of reproductive failure22. Another possible
explanation is the “no preference” hypothesis. Grafen and Godfray15, discussing vicarious selection in the dioecious fig–pollinator system, suggested that pollinating wasps cannot choose
between male and female figs because there are no detectable differences between them. In fact, female trees need to attract wasps to produce seeds and male trees need to attract pollinators
whose offspring will disperse their pollen, i.e. whose offspring will be attracted by female trees. Thus, trees of both sexes are strongly selected to mimic each other. Since at the
receptive stage there are no obvious visual differences (in diameter, colour, etc.) between male and female figs and since chemical signals have been shown to be sufficient to attract
specific pollinating fig wasps in the absence of other cues13, pollination by deceit in dioecious figs can be hypothesized to depend on mimicry in the chemical composition of floral scent.
Yet, the importance of chemical mimicry in maintaining a mutualism based on pollination by deceit in dioecious fig species is still largely unresolved. Previous studies seemed to indicate
that different species of Ficus present alternative strategies in intersexual chemical mimicry, whether for pollination or for seed dispersal23,26,27,28. We hypothesize that in fig species
where male and female trees flower synchronously, selection will favour a strong resemblance of the chemical signal emitted by figs of the two sexes in order to ensure that pollinators visit
female figs. In contrast, in fig species where males and females flower mainly asynchronously, this selection among fig sexes could be relaxed (as female figs will be visited by wasps that
do not have a choice between sexes). However, scent divergence between sexes would still be limited because figs are still under strong selection to produce odours allowing host species
recognition.
In fig species, dioecy is a derived trait and has evolved at least twice from monoecy29; among the six subgenera of figs, dioecy occurs in three (Ficus, Sycomorus and Sycidium). In the
present study, using a large data set (seven fig species from the three dioecious subgenera, Table 1), we investigated the volatile profiles (composition and quantity) emitted by receptive
figs of both sexes. We verified the role of these flower scents in host species-specific recognition and in ensuring constancy of pollinators. Comparing fig species in which males and
females flower synchronously and asynchronously, we specifically examined the potential of volatile chemical signals in mediating intersexual mimicry in dioecious nursery pollination
mutualisms by estimating the degree of intersexual chemical similarity in species with varied flowering phenologies.
We identified a total of about 150 VOCs produced by the receptive figs of the seven dioecious species. The floral scents emitted by these figs were mainly composed of monoterpenes and
sesquiterpenes. The blend of compounds was generally dominated by one or a few common terpenoid compounds, the identity of which differed among the species (Fig. 1); for example,
β-caryophyllene for F. fulva, germacrene-D for F. fistulosa, or (E)-β-ocimene for F. hispida (see Supplementary Table S1 for more details). In one species, a rare compound dominated, i.e.,
4-methylanisole in the scent of F. semicordata.
Proportions of the main compounds (representing more than 5% of the total scent) in the volatile bouquet emitted at receptivity by the two sexes of synchronous species (male and female figs
flowering at the same time) and asynchronous species (male and female figs flowering at different times).
Scents of individuals from the same species are clearly grouped together based on the ordination (NMDS) of the odour samples from the different species (based on the Bray-Curtis distances)
(Fig. 2). Moreover, the PERMANOVA confirmed that the volatile chemical profiles of the receptive figs varied significantly among the different species (see Table 2).
Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination of chemical composition of all studied species at receptive stage, based on Bray-Curtis distance, rotated by principal component
analysis (triangle: male; circle: female) (S: synchronous species, A: asynchronous species).
We then separated the data by species to test for the effect of sex on the volatile bouquet of VOCs emitted by each species. The species fell into two groups in these analyses (NMDS
ordinations presented in Fig. 3). First, the volatile profiles of the sexes cannot be separated in species in which both sexes flower synchronously (namely F. fistulosa, F. fulva, and F.
hispida). These results are confirmed by the PERMANOVAs, in which the factor ‘sex’ is not significant (p > 0.105, see Table 2). The second group consists of species in which the two sexes do
not flower synchronously. For this group, volatile profiles showed significant variation between sexes. On the ordination graphs based on Bray-Curtis distances, VOCs emitted by receptive
male and female figs are separated in three of the four asynchronous species, F. auriculata, F. semicordata and F. septica (Fig. 3). The PERMANOVA (for all species p ≤ 0.010, Table 2) shows
a clear and significant effect of sex on the composition of the floral blends emitted by receptive figs of asynchronously flowering figs. For F. exasperata, even if the volatile profiles of
male and female figs overlap on the ordination graphs (Fig. 3), the positions of the centroids of the groups are significantly separated statistically (Table 2).
Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination of chemical composition of the two sexes of all studied species at receptive stage, based on Bray-Curtis distance, rotated by principal
component analysis (triangle: male; circle: female).
For the species in which VOC composition significantly differed between sexes, we conducted a one-way Simper analysis to identify the compounds that best explain dissimilarities between
sexes. In some species, this analysis revealed that major compounds were responsible for these dissimilarities between the bouquets of male and female figs, as in the case of F. semicordata,
where the proportion of 4-methylanisole mainly explains this difference (18% of the variation between sexes). For the other species, this difference was explained not only by some major
compounds but also by minor compounds such as decanal (5%), (Z)-3-hexenol, ethyl hexanoate, linalool and β-caryophyllene (all about 4%) for F. auriculata, or linalool, phenylethanol,
(Z)-3-hexenol, hexyl acetate, (E)-2-hexenyl acetate, β-bourbonene and eugenol (all at about 3%) for F. septica. Finally, for F. exasperata differences between sexes in VOCs emitted by
receptive figs were mainly due to a suite of compounds (both major and minor), although each only contributed to a small proportion (about 2%) of the dissimilarities. In F. exasperata, these
compounds included methyl-acetophenone, linalool, methyl salicylate, terpinolene, (E)-β-ocimene, hexadecane, myrcene, perillene and α-copaene.
Except for one species, F. fistulosa, there was no significant difference in the quantity of VOCs emitted by male and female figs during receptivity (Fig. 4, Table 3). For F. fistulosa,
receptive female figs produced about four times more VOCs (total quantity) than did male figs (3.7 ± 1.4 ng fig−1h−1 for female figs versus 1.0 ± 0.45 ng fig−1h−1 for male figs), although
figs of the sexes are equal in size (see mean diameter in Table 1). Among the different species, however, fig diameter (Table 1) is a parameter that contributes to explain differences in the
amount of VOCs produced, and not surprisingly species with larger figs, such as F. auriculata and F. septica, produced higher quantities of volatile compounds.
Mean quantity of VOCs (ng fig−1. hr−1) emitted by the different Ficus species and sexes.
Our results represent to the best of our knowledge the first evidence for a strong effect of flowering phenology as a selective pressure on intersexual chemical mimicry. They also reinforce
previous results on interspecies variation of flower scent in Ficus30. Indeed, they highlight the importance of flower scents as a crucial trait for avoiding host identification mistakes in
Ficus species and maintaining highly specific interactions in these and other horizontally transmitted mutualisms13.
Our findings corroborate the role of flower scents as a pre-zygotic barrier between closely related plant species in nursery pollination systems31, which could lead to reproductive isolation
during speciation32. Moreover, our results confirm that neither potential interpopulation variation nor intersexual variation affects this clear interspecies variation of flower scent in
dioecious Ficus species. Furthermore, behavioural experiments conducted on the pollinators of some of the species we studied (F. hispida, F. semicordata, and F. carica) have already shown
that pollinating fig wasps use this specific chemical message as a cue to locate their mutualistic host33 (M. Proffit & C. Soler, unpubl. data). Once again, the “endless” variation in the
composition of floral signals allows fig species to elaborate quite complex and specific blends in order to attract their specific pollinators13.
Regarding intersexual mimicry in dioecious species, our results provide evidence within a similar phylogenetic background that there are two different answers to the question of ‘how to be a
dioecious fig species’ that depend on flowering phenology. On one hand, in dioecious species in which male and female trees flower synchronously, fig-pollinating wasps loaded with pollen
from their natal male figs have a simultaneous choice between receptive male and female figs within the same population. For these synchronous species, it is important to ensure that female
pollinating wasps cannot discriminate between sexes in order to maintain both male (pollen and pollinating wasp production) and female (seed production) functions. Consequently, this leads
to tighter intersexual mimicry in flower scents, as we have shown for three synchronously flowering dioecious species belonging to two different Ficus subgenera, F. fulva, F. fistulosa and
F. hispida.
In only one of these synchronously flowering species did we find a difference in the quantity of compounds released by receptive figs, with the deceptive sex (female figs) producing greater
quantities of VOCs. This may be consistent with the need to ensure pollinator visitation even to the fatally deceptive female sex. In other less exclusive but still specialized interactions,
and in those without the fatal consequences of choosing the wrong sex, such as the mutualistic interactions between the seed-predating and pollinating noctuid moth Hadena bicruris and its
dioecious host Silene latifolia, Dötterl et al.34 also found no difference in the quality and quantity of VOCs emitted by female and male flowers (but see35). In Salix caprea, an
insect-pollinated dioecious species, total scent emission was higher in male flowers, and some sex-specific differences in relative scent composition were detected. However, naïve honey bees
were equally attracted to the scent of both sexes36. Remarkable qualitative intersexual differences in floral scents were also found by Okamoto and collaborators37 in their detailed study
of sexual differences in floral scent of the monoecious species of the tribe Phyllantheae (Malpighiales, Phyllanthaceae) that are pollinated by Epicephala moths (Lepidoptera, Gracillariidae)
in interactions that include some examples of nursery pollination mutualisms. In these examples, differences in scents exist between male and female flowers of the same individual,
highlighting the possibility for sexual scent divergence even at the intra-individual level. In addition, these authors show that mated female Epicephala moths preferred the scent of male
flowers over that of female flowers. In contrast to the interactions between figs and their pollinating wasps, in the nursery pollination interaction in Phyllanthaceae, it is mandatory for
the pollinators to visit first male, then female flowers in order to gain the reward provided by the interaction. Even though the mechanism triggering the visit of female flowers following
that of male flowers has not been elucidated in the Phyllanthaceae system, sexual dimorphism of floral scent and its discrimination by pollinators have been interpreted as adaptive for both
plant and pollinator37.
On the other hand, for fig species in which individuals of the two sexes flower at different times of the year, the short-lived pollinating wasps have no choice and simply enter the
available receptive figs within the population based on the host-specific chemical signal. In such situations, the selective pressure on intersexual mimicry should be relaxed. In fact,
intersexual variation of floral scents is detectable at the intraspecific level for the species of this category that we studied. However, this intraspecific variation between sexes in
flower scents should be less marked than the interspecific variation that allows pollinators to distinguish signals from the specific host fig species to avoid mistakes, especially if fig
species occur in sympatry38, as for F. hispida and F. exasperata in our study. Our results thus suggest that this sexual dimorphism is not likely to disrupt the species-specific encounter of
the two partners, confirming the strong species isolation mechanisms expected in dioecious figs38.
The sexual difference in dioecious figs appears to rely on VOC identity rather than on the overall VOC quantity, in contrast to most previously studied angiosperm species, where intersexual
differences are mostly due to a higher total quantity of VOCs emitted by male flowers5 (but see39). In another nursery pollination mutualism characterized by partial asynchrony in the
flowering of male and female plants, that between Chamaerops humilis, the dioecious dwarf palm, and Derelomus chamaeropsis, its pollinating weevil, male plants produced four times more VOCs
than female plants. However, the qualitative composition of scents did not differ between the sexes, allowing female plants, the deceptive sex, to also attract the species-specific
pollinating weevil40. These findings suggest that quality and quantity can interact in diverse ways based on particular ecologies and contexts and that no one unique prediction is possible.
For the dioecious fig species in which males and females flower asynchronously, differences in the VOCs emitted may be accounted for by differences in the proportions of some major
compounds, such as 4-methylanisole for F. semicordata. However, some minor compounds from different pathways may also play a role in these intersexual differences of VOC bouquets, such as
methyl-acetophenone, linalool, methyl salicylate or α-copaene for F. exasperata. The statistical analysis used in the present study, performed as recommended in recent studies comparing
flower scents36,37,41, minimizes the potential effect of major compounds on their contribution to the total variance.
This study on several fig species provides novel insights into our understanding of the occurrence of intersexual chemical mimicry in dioecious species. In her well-documented review,
Ashman5 reported that the occurrence of sexual dimorphism is usually explained in the literature by i) sexual selection, ii) allometric relations, iii) honest signals, iv) directed
pollinator movement, or v) post-pollination partners. In contrast, the absence of sexual dimorphism may be explained by intersexual mimicry or by between-sex genetic constraints. These
various explanations have come from different studies conducted on different species, with varied evolutionary and ecological histories, and cannot really be applied in our Ficus case. In
dioecious figs we found intersexual mimicry in species with synchronous flowering between the sexes and relaxed intersexual mimicry in species where male and female fig availability is
temporally separated. First, given the special biology of dioecious figs, there is no advantage via sexual selection accruing to males that have scent profiles more attractive to pollinators
than those of females, since visits (albeit fatal) to female figs (in which seeds are produced) by pollinators carrying its pollen are necessary for the function of a male tree to be
performed. Second, for all the fig species we studied, male and female figs have the same size, shape and colour, but they differ greatly in the rewards offered. Since this system is based
on deception (in which female fig trees are the fatally deceptive sex), the issue of honesty of signals leading to sexual dimorphism42 does not arise. Furthermore, since pollinators have
only one opportunity to enter a fig (either a true fig wasp nursery in male trees or a fatally attractive deceptive one in female trees), the question of directed pollinator movement from
one sex to another by sexual dimorphism in floral scent also does not apply. The only remaining explanation from Ashman’s review5 is that which takes into account post-pollination visitors.
These are effectively different for the two sexes: male figs are parasitized by other wasps, contrary to most female figs43. However, this sexual difference in attraction of post-pollination
parasites holds not only for asynchronous species of dioecious figs but also for synchronous species: since no sexual variation of scents has been detected in the latter case, it is
unlikely that any explanation based on selective pressures exerted by post-pollination interactions will apply here. This therefore means in figs that there is no advantage to sexual
dimorphism in floral scent via any of the selection pressures often associated with scent dimorphism5. The scent of the fatally attractive female must converge towards that of the rewarding
male sex in figs, which may imply that females must mimic males, or alternatively that floral scent in each sex must show directional selection towards the other in order for individual
trees to achieve
fitness and consequently for the mutualism to survive. This is especially true when both sexes are simultaneously available to the pollinator. However, when the sexes are not simultaneously
available, as in asynchronous species, it is possible that the host-specific chemical signal (which is likely a blend of volatiles) remains constant between the sexes, but that additional
VOCs—that are not sufficient to mask or blur the species-specific host-recognition signal for the pollinator—are unconstrained to vary, resulting in a statistical difference between the
scents of the sexes. So far, for these species we do not know the specific compounds in fig scents that are responsible for pollinator attraction. However, we do have some evidence that
pollinators of several Ficus species are able to detect not only the major compounds emitted by receptive figs but also some minor compounds44 (L. Zongbo et al. and M. Proffit et al.,
unpublished data). Therefore, the possible effect on behaviour (e. g. attraction or repulsion) of these minor compounds should not be neglected in fig/wasp interactions, a precaution that
echoes those suggested for other plant–insect interactions45. Consequently, thorough analysis of the contribution of the different compounds should be complemented by experimental
behavioural studies, or by GC/EAD (gas chromatography/electro-antennographic detection), in order to know precisely which compounds are active in attraction24,46.
We have thus shown in this study the existence of two alternative ways to be a dioecious fig species that depend on differences in the synchrony of flowering between sexes. Since dioecious
Ficus are in fact anatomically gynodioecious, female and male figs are structurally not identical. Observing intersexual variations of scents (as occur in asynchronous species) is thus not
surprising and may be explained by different scent-emitting structures. However, this constitutive difference is thwarted by vicarious selection for intersexual chemical mimicry15, to
prevent the breakdown of the mutualism, in the case of synchronously flowering species. Nevertheless, in both cases, the deceptive sex is pollinated, and the interactions between pollinating
fig wasps and dioecious fig species are successfully maintained.
In order to have a good phylogenetic and geographical representation for this comparative study, we chose species with different flowering phenologies (synchronous versus asynchronous
flowering of males and females) from different sections among the three subgenera of dioecious species, and from different geographical regions distributed over tropical, subtropical regions
of the Old World (Table 1). No dioecious fig species occur in the New World. From published data or our personal observations, we can divide these species into two groups regarding their
flowering phenology47,48. In the first group, the two sexes flower in synchrony in our studied populations: F. hispida, F. fistulosa and F. fulva; in the second one, flowering phenology is
mainly asynchronous, with receptive figs of male and female trees co-occurring very rarely in time: F. auriculata, F. exasperata, F. semicordata and F. septica27,28,33.
Floral scents were collected only when it was clear that the selected figs had reached receptivity, i.e. when they attract their pollinators. This stage is easily recognizable in figs since
the ostiole ( = opening of the fig) is soft, bracts lining this ostiolar opening are not tightly adpressed, and many pollinators fly around the receptive figs.
The scents were collected by the adsorption-desorption headspace technique17. For odour collection, only receptive figs were collected from the tree and directly enclosed in polyethylene
terephthalate (Nalophan®) bags, which have been shown not to release or adsorb volatiles. For these extractions we used two different methods, depending on the type of volatile collection
traps:
For traps containing 30 mg of Alltech Super Q adsorbent (ARS Inc., Gainesville, FL, USA), airflow was maintained through the bags by two pumps. Entrance and exit flow rates (controlled by
flow meters) were 400 and 300 ml min-1. The extraction duration was 3 h. Trapped volatiles were eluted with 150 μl of dichloromethane, and two internal standards (nonane and dodecane, at 200
ng μl−1 for all species except F. semicordata, where octane, 117.00 ng μl−1, and decyl acetate, 144.17 ng μl−1, were used because dodecane was present in the VOCs released by this species)
were added to each sample for gas chromatography. VOCs were analysed by injection in a CP-3800 (Varian Inc., Palo Alto, CA, USA) gas chromatograph with a flame ionization detector (FID)
coupled with a Saturn 2000 mass spectrometer (Varian Inc., Palo Alto, USA).
For traps filled with 3 mg of a 1:1 mixture of Tenax-TA 60–80 and Carbotrap 20–40 (containing a 110 ng μl−1 solution of nonane and dodecane as internal standards), air was drawn out of the
bags and over the trap for 5 min by a pump with controlled airflow (200 ml min−1) after keeping the figs and traps in the bags for 30 min. In this thermal-desorption method, the samples were
analysed on the same CP-3800 Varian GC/MS using a 1079 injector fitting to the ChromatoProbe® device.
For both techniques we always performed blank extractions with empty bags to control for contaminant compounds. Odour collection was always performed under natural light and at ambient
temperatures between 12:00 and 15:00 hours, corresponding to the insects’ period of maximum activity during our field season. Comparisons of the efficiency of the two types of traps (M.
Proffit, unpubl. data) allowed us to use both types of volatile collections in this comparative study. Moreover, we always used the same technique to collect the volatiles of one species and
straightforward comparison of scents emitted by the two sexes was thus always possible.
The relative proportions of the compounds emitted by figs were determined for each sample using GC-FID chromatograms. In addition, for each sample, we estimated the total quantities of
volatile compounds by using the peak areas of both internal standards in GC-FID chromatograms as a reference quantity. Peak areas of all the compounds were determined, and then divided by
the peak areas of the standards and multiplied by the known amounts for the standards.
Traps were stored in the dark in a freezer until analysis. For both sampling techniques a Varian column CP-SIL low blend MS (30 m, ID 0.25 mm, film thickness 0.25 μm) and helium as carrier
gas (at 1 ml min−1) were used. The injector split vent was opened at a ratio of 1:4. Oven temperature was programmed at 50 °C during 3 min; then increasing by 3 °C min–1 to 100 °C, by 2.7 °C
min–1 to 140 °C, by 2.4 °C min–1 to 180 °C and by 6 °C min–1 to 250 °C. For Chromatoprobe® samples, the injection was done at 40 °C for 1 min, followed by a warm-up for 3 min, until 250 °C,
at the rate of 200 °C min–1. The temperature program for the analysis was: 40 °C for 3 min, ramped from 40 °C to 100 °C at 3.3 °C min–1 to 250 °C, from 100 °C to 140 °C at 2.9 °C min–1,
then 140 °C to 180 °C at 2.7 °C min–1, and finally from 180 °C to 250 °C at 10 °C min–1. Temperature was maintained at 250 °C for 8 subsequent minutes.
Compound identification was based on computer matching of the mass spectra with NIST 98 MS library, on retention indices reported in the literature49 and, whenever available, by injection of
reference compounds. By comparing spectra of each sample with the respective control sample (empty bag, same day and conditions of collection), putative contaminant compounds were
subtracted.
All statistical analyses were performed using R50. In order to compare patterns of scent composition both among different species and between sexes within each species, we performed a
non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) using the function meta MDS in the package Vegan51. For the comparison of volatile profiles among different Ficus species we used the relative
proportions of all the compounds emitted by the seven species, whereas for inter-sexual variation of scent each species was analysed separately. Prior to the analysis, data were square-root
transformed and then standardized using a Wisconsin double standardization. A data matrix of pairwise comparisons among samples was then calculated using the Bray-Curtis distance index,
which ranges between 0 and 152. NMDS was used to find the best low-dimensional representation of the distance matrix. Finally, the solution was scaled by rotating it, so that the largest
variance of samples was on the first axis51,53. The null hypothesis of no difference in patterns of scent composition among species and between sexes for each species was tested with a
permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) using the function ‘adonis’ in Vegan. PERMANOVA is a nonparametric (in the case of one-factor models) permutation-based version of
the multivariate analysis of variance, and thus with no assumption regarding the distributions of the original variables54. However, PERMANOVAs are very sensitive to heteroscedasticity55.
Therefore, prior to analysis homoscedasticity was confirmed using a multivariate analogue of Levene’s test for homogeneity of variance. PERMANOVAs were run on the Bray-Curtis distance index
with 1000 permutations per analysis. A similarity percentage (one-way SIMPER, with factor sex) was used to identify the compounds that best explained dissimilarities (up to 30%) between
sexes.
For each species, we used a linear model to test if there were significant effects of sex on the total quantities of VOCs emitted by figs. The goodness-of-fit of all models was evaluated by
inspecting the models’ residuals; the normality of the residuals was tested using a Shapiro-Wilk’s test. For data with residuals not normally distributed, a log transformation was used to
ensure their normality. Significance (p