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The flowers of the wild Clematis species and cultivars at the stage of full blooming were grown at the resource nursery in the Institute of Subtropical Crops of Zhejiang Province (120°37'51.1” E, 28°0' 7.34” N), China. All the plants were cultivated under the same conditions of fertilization, irrigation, disease prevention, and pesticide application. The flowers of different wild species and cultivars were collected for sensory evaluation and volatile collection in 22−28, April, 2018.
Screening the aromatic species and cultivars by sensory evaluation
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The aroma intensity of 29 available Clematis species and 42 cultivars were determined initially by the survey of the panel composed of 10 people (five males and five females) aging from 23−54. In this study, approximately 5−7 g of flowers at full-openness stages of each species/cultivars were collected and carefully placed in clean water within a semi-open room with proper air circulation, which allows them to acclimate for a period of 1 h. After completing the olfactory test, all participants evaluated the aroma intensity of each sample. The aroma intensity of all Clematis species/cultivars were classified as three degrees of strong, medium and weak[11]. Finally, four wild species (W1−W4) and five cultivars (C1−C5) of Clematis were screened out as aromatic Clematis species/cultivars for the following volatile collection and identification (Table 1).
Table 1. Information and classification of the selected Clematis wild species and their cultivars.
Code Accession Classification Corolla
typesCollection
localityAroma
intensityAbbreviation 1 C. henryi Wild species (WS) Bell-shaped Wenzhou, Zhejiang, China Medium W1 2 C. finetiana Wild species spreading Wenzhou, Zhejiang, China Strong W2 3 C. courtoisii Wild species spreading Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China Medium W3 4 C. owatarii Wild species spreading Pingdong, Taiwan, China Weak W4 5 C. florida 'Diana's Delight' Cultivars (CS) spreading England Weak C1 6 C. florida 'Duchess of Edinburgh' Cultivars double petals Poland Weak C2 7 C. florida 'Marie Boisselot' Cultivars spreading French Strong C3 8 C. viorna 'Jade' Cultivars Bell-shaped Japan Medium C4 9 C. florida 'Bees Jubilee' Cultivars spreading Poland Weak C5 Floral volatile collection by dynamic headspace system
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Volatiles emitted from intact flowers of screened Clematis were collected in an open headspace sampling system (Analytical Research Systems, Gainesville, FL, USA) as previously reported with minor modification[8]. A single detached inflorescence in a single flask with 150 mL of distilled water were placed in a glass chamber (20 cm diameter, 50 cm tall) covered with a removable lid. Charcoal-purified air entered the chamber at a flow rate of 1.3 L/min from the top through a Teflon hose. Volatiles were collected for 4 h by pumping air from the chamber through a Super Q volatile collection trap (Analytical Research Systems) and eluted using 100 µL methylene chloride containing nonyl acetate (0.003% w/v) as an internal standard. The semi-quantification relative to the internal standard (peak area) was applied for the quantification of floral volatiles.
Floral volatiles identification by GC-MS
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Floral volatiles were analyzed by a gas chromatograph (Agilent-9000, Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA) coupled to a quadrupole mass selective detector (Agilent-7000D). Separation was performed on an Agilent HP 5 MS capillary column (30 m × 0.25 mm) with helium as carrier gas (5 ml/min of flow rate). A splitless injection (injection temperature 250 °C) was used, and a temperature gradient of 6 °C/min from 60 °C (3-min hold) to 300 °C was applied. Products were identified using the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) mass spectral database. Semi-quantification was performed by comparing the peak area of individual compounds to that of the internal standard. Kovat's retention indices were calculated by injecting the hydrocarbon standard of C7 to C40 (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) to GC-MS.
Principal component analysis (PCA)
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Principal component analysis (PCA) using SPSS 22.0 software was conducted to determine relationships among the four wild species and five cultivars in their chemical composition based on the emissions of individual floral volatile compounds.
Statistical analysis
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Differences in emission rates of volatile compounds among different species and cultivars were analyzed by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). The analyses were conducted with SAS V8 software (Version 8.02. SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA) and all statistical effects were considered significant at p < 0.05. All p-values for multiple comparisons have been corrected by Bonferroni correction.
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The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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About this article
Cite this article
Jiang Y, Ma X, Zhang W, Hu Q, Zheng J, et al. 2023. Diversity and intraspecific variation of floral volatile compounds underscoring the terpenoids and methyl esters among the wild Clematis species and their cultivars. Ornamental Plant Research 3:20 doi: 10.48130/OPR-2023-0020
Diversity and intraspecific variation of floral volatile compounds underscoring the terpenoids and methyl esters among the wild Clematis species and their cultivars
- Received: 14 September 2023
- Accepted: 21 November 2023
- Published online: 29 November 2023
Abstract: Floral scent is a crucial characteristic that greatly affects the reproductive process and also the market value of numerous ornamental crops. As the pivotal species in basal dicotyledonous, Clematis is widely favored as an ornamental vine plant due to its varied colors and shapes of flowers. However, the diversity and complexity of the floral fragrance in Clematis is largely unexplored. Thus, on the basis of the initial sensory survey, four fragrant wild Clematis species and five cultivars were selected to investigate the variation of the floral volatile profiling between the wild Clematis species and their cultivars. Our results demonstrated that a total of 162 volatile compositions, including terpenoids, benzenoids, fatty acid derivatives, and N-containing compounds, were successively detected by the combination of dynamic headspace collection and GC-MS analysis. The qualitative and quantitative comparison combined with clustering and PCA analysis indicated the interspecific discrepancy in floral volatiles between the wild Clematis species and cultivars. C. finetiana exhibited a higher emission with the characteristic releasing pattern being distinct from other species. In conclusion, the exploitation of the emission patterns, biosynthesis, and potential biological functions of floral scent, especially for terpenoids and methyl esters, provides a comprehensive understanding of volatile metabolism in fragrant Clematis species and their cultivars. These findings can be useful for aromatic resources screening and breeding strategies developing to create new aromatic cultivars of Clematis.
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Key words:
- Clematis /
- Interspecific variation /
- Floral scent /
- Terpene /
- Methyl ester /
- Pollinator attraction