弄清群落组成变化和授粉者觅食选择对植物繁殖成功的影响

IF 5.4 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Ecography Pub Date : 2024-07-18 DOI:10.1111/ecog.07240
Alfonso Allen‐Perkins, Maddi Artamendi, Daniel Montoya, Encarnación Rubio, Ainhoa Magrach
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引用次数: 0

摘要

传粉昆虫在选择花朵采集花蜜或花粉时的选择对于决定植物授粉服务的有效性至关重要。从植物的角度来看,这种有效性是由物种(如传粉昆虫密度和花朵形态)和群落(包括传粉昆虫多样性和植物对传粉昆虫的竞争)两个层面的因素决定的。在物种层面,授粉者个体的有效性受到觅食选择、植物特征以及由此产生的植物物种内部和之间的花粉流的影响。在自然生态系统中,这些物种共存于一个复杂的群落中,在这个群落中,各种相互作用会改变觅食选择并改变花粉流,从而产生群落水平的有效性,这是授粉昆虫有效性的一个较少探讨的方面。本研究调查了两个研究区域和两个花季中授粉昆虫个体觅食选择的驱动因素。研究还评估了不同植物物种接受授粉服务的群落效应,考虑了植物之间通过共享授粉者产生的间接相互作用,并评估了它们对植物繁殖成功率的影响。我们的研究结果表明,授粉者觅食选择的决定因素在不同的生境中是一致的,花的恒定性和花的丰度在所有物种和地点中都起着关键作用。随着植物和传粉昆虫组成的变化,觅食选择会在整个花季中发生变化,从而对授粉效果产生重大影响。同一植物物种的个体在授粉服务使用上的重叠会降低其坐果率,而与其他植物物种的个体共享授粉服务则会提高坐果率。我们的研究结果表明,在植物和授粉昆虫物种丰富度的驱动下,生物多样性与生态系统功能之间存在着重要的正相关关系,这表明不同植物物种在授粉服务使用上的重叠促进了促进性互动,而不是竞争。这可能是由于在植物物种多样性较高的条件下,授粉供应更为稳定,而且存在减轻异种花粉沉积负面影响的机制。
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Untangling the plant reproductive success of changing community composition and pollinator foraging choices
Pollinator choices when selecting flowers for nectar or pollen collection are crucial in determining the effectiveness of pollination services provided to plants. From the plant's perspective, this effectiveness is a phenomenon shaped by factors at both the species‐ (e.g. pollinator density and flower morphology) and community‐level, including pollinator diversity and plant competition for pollinators. At the species level, individual pollinator effectiveness is influenced by foraging choices, plant identity, and the resulting pollen flow within and between plant species. In natural ecosystems, these species coexist within a complex community, where various interactions can modify foraging choices and alter pollen flows, giving rise to community‐level effectiveness, a less explored aspect of pollinator effectiveness. This study investigates the drivers of individual pollinator foraging choices across two study areas and two flowering seasons. It also assesses the community‐level effectiveness of pollination services received by different plant species, considering indirect interactions between plants through shared pollinators and evaluating their impact on plant reproductive success. Our results show that the determinants of pollinator foraging choices are consistent across different habitats, with floral constancy and flower abundance playing pivotal roles across all species and sites. Foraging choices can shift throughout the flowering season as plant and pollinator composition changes, significantly impacting pollination effectiveness. The overlap in pollination service use by individuals of the same plant species decreases their fruit set, whereas sharing pollinator services with individuals of other plant species increases fruit set. Our results support significant, positive biodiversity–ecosystem functioning associations driven by both plant and pollinator species richness, suggesting that the overlap in pollination service use by different plant species fosters facilitative interactions rather than competition. This is likely influenced by more stable pollination supplies under high plant species diversity conditions and the existence of mechanisms to mitigate the negative impacts of heterospecific pollen deposition.
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来源期刊
Ecography
Ecography 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
3.40%
发文量
122
审稿时长
8-16 weeks
期刊介绍: ECOGRAPHY publishes exciting, novel, and important articles that significantly advance understanding of ecological or biodiversity patterns in space or time. Papers focusing on conservation or restoration are welcomed, provided they are anchored in ecological theory and convey a general message that goes beyond a single case study. We encourage papers that seek advancing the field through the development and testing of theory or methodology, or by proposing new tools for analysis or interpretation of ecological phenomena. Manuscripts are expected to address general principles in ecology, though they may do so using a specific model system if they adequately frame the problem relative to a generalized ecological question or problem. Purely descriptive papers are considered only if breaking new ground and/or describing patterns seldom explored. Studies focused on a single species or single location are generally discouraged unless they make a significant contribution to advancing general theory or understanding of biodiversity patterns and processes. Manuscripts merely confirming or marginally extending results of previous work are unlikely to be considered in Ecography. Papers are judged by virtue of their originality, appeal to general interest, and their contribution to new developments in studies of spatial and temporal ecological patterns. There are no biases with regard to taxon, biome, or biogeographical area.
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