洞穴真相:为什么大黄蜂会多次抢花?

Plants Pub Date : 2024-09-06 DOI:10.3390/plants13172507
Judith L. Bronstein, Goggy Davidowitz, Elinor M. Lichtenberg, Rebecca E. Irwin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

初级盗蜜者通过在花朵上打洞取食,在此过程中往往会绕过植物的生殖器官。在许多被盗花植物中,一朵花上会有多个洞。我们很难理解为什么一朵花会被反复打洞:打洞意味着采蜜者已经采食过花蜜,这似乎预示着低回报。我们在一种被熊蜂授粉和抢花的植物 Corydalis caseana(Fumariaceae)上测试了这种模式的三种解释:(1)只有在所有花朵都被抢过一次之后,才会出现多个洞;(2)个体觅食者在单次访问中会打多个洞;(3)对蜜蜂来说,抢夺较老的花朵更有利可图,即使这些花朵已经被抢过。我们从 2014 年到 2016 年在美国科罗拉多州的一个种群中利用随时间变化的盗洞率、花朵寿命、访问过和未访问过的花朵中的花蜜积累以及花朵生命周期中盗洞的积累等数据对上述假设进行了检验。当三分之二的花朵还没有一个盗洞时,多个盗洞就已经出现了,因此我们可以否定第一个假设。第二种假设不能完全解释多个盗洞的原因,因为有 35% 的额外盗洞出现在第一个盗洞出现后一天或更多天的花朵上。对袋装花序和裸露花序的重复取样表明,花朵的填充速度是恒定的,并且在排水后会完全重新填充。因此,与较老的花朵相比,年轻的花朵对觅食者的价值始终较低,即使它们之前曾被抢夺过,这与第三个假设一致。虽然还需要进一步的研究,但这些结果为该植物物种以及其他可能的植物物种中花蜜被盗的矛盾性聚集现象提供了一个简单的解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Hole Truth: Why Do Bumble Bees Rob Flowers More Than Once?
Primary nectar-robbers feed through holes they make in flowers, often bypassing the plant’s reproductive organs in the process. In many robbed plants, multiple holes are made in a single flower. Why a flower should be robbed repeatedly is difficult to understand: a hole signals that a nectar forager has already fed, which would seem likely to predict low rewards. We tested three explanations for this pattern in Corydalis caseana (Fumariaceae), a bumble bee pollinated and robbed plant: (1) multiple holes appear only after all flowers have been robbed once; (2) individual foragers make multiple holes during single visits; and (3) it is more profitable for bees to rob older flowers, even if they have already been robbed. We tested these hypotheses from 2014 to 2016 in a Colorado, USA population using data on robbing rates over time, floral longevity, nectar accumulation in visited and unvisited flowers, and the accumulation of robbing holes across the life of flowers. Multiple holes were already appearing when two-thirds of flowers still lacked a single hole, allowing us to reject the first hypothesis. The second hypothesis cannot offer a full explanation for multiple robbing holes because 35% of additional holes appeared in flowers one or more days after the first hole was made. Repeated sampling of bagged and exposed inflorescences revealed that flowers filled at a constant rate and refilled completely after being drained. Consequently, young flowers are of consistently low value to foragers compared to older flowers even if they had previously been robbed, consistent with the third hypothesis. While further studies are needed, these results offer a simple explanation for the paradoxical clustering of nectar-robbing damage in this and possibly other plant species.
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