Differential outcomes of nectar robbing on the reproductive success of a melittophilous and an ornithophilous species
Pedro Joaquim Bergamo, Marlies Sazima
ARTIGO
Inglês
Agradecimentos: We thank all members of the Atlantic Rainforest field course 2014 at Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) for insights during the development of the project. The UNICAMP ecology graduate program provided facilities that made this study possible. We thank C. E. P. Nunes, M....
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Agradecimentos: We thank all members of the Atlantic Rainforest field course 2014 at Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) for insights during the development of the project. The UNICAMP ecology graduate program provided facilities that made this study possible. We thank C. E. P. Nunes, M. Villarta, and L. Mosquera for providing photos of figure 1. We also thank A. R. Rech and P. K. Maruyama for useful comments on previous stages of the manuscript. This work was supported by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (grants 830514/1999-6 to P. J. Bergamo and 303084/2011-1 to M. Sazima)
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Nectar robbers can affect pollinator behavior and indirectly affect plant fitness. The signal of such effects (positive, neutral, or negative) may depend on how the primary pollinators of a given plant species respond to robbed flowers. Comparative studies are important to give insight on which...
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Nectar robbers can affect pollinator behavior and indirectly affect plant fitness. The signal of such effects (positive, neutral, or negative) may depend on how the primary pollinators of a given plant species respond to robbed flowers. Comparative studies are important to give insight on which factors are linked to these differential outcomes of nectar robbing on plant reproductive success. Here, we investigated the effect of a common Neotropical nectar robber, the stingless bee, Trigona spinipes (Apidae), on the reproductive success of the bee-pollinated Crotalaria vitellina (Fabaceae) and the hummingbird-pollinated Besleria longimucronata (Gesneriaceae). We compared the robbing rate (number of flowers robbed relative to total flower display) between species and evaluated the effect of robbing on plant reproductive success by comparing the seed number per fruit of robbed fruits (identified by the presence of scars in the calyx, caused by the robber) with that of intact fruits. The hummingbird-pollinated B. longimucronata had a higher proportion of robbed flowers than the bee-pollinated C. vitellina. Moreover, we found a negative effect of robbing on seed number per fruit for B. longimucronata but no effect for C. vitellina. The differences in the outcome of nectar robbing can be interpreted based on previous studies of pollinator behavior: hummingbirds often avoid nectar-robbed flowers, while bees often do not exhibit a preference between robbed and intact flowers. Our results show that the same robber species can have differential effects on the reproductive success of distinct plant species. In this sense, the outcome of nectar robbing will depend on the interplay between plant traits and pollinator behavior
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CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ
830514/1999-6; 303084/2011-1
fechado
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/696234
Texto completo: https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/696234
Differential outcomes of nectar robbing on the reproductive success of a melittophilous and an ornithophilous species
Pedro Joaquim Bergamo, Marlies Sazima
Differential outcomes of nectar robbing on the reproductive success of a melittophilous and an ornithophilous species
Pedro Joaquim Bergamo, Marlies Sazima
Fontes
International journal of plant sciences (Fonte avulsa) |