喜马拉雅地区共生杜鹃花的花性状和群落系统发育结构决定了植物与传粉者的相互作用

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Shweta Basnett , Shivaprakash K. Nagaraju , Robbie Hart , Soubadra M. Devy
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引用次数: 2

摘要

高山海拔梯度是测试传粉媒介对植物群落组合影响的理想环境。随着海拔的增加,鸟类传粉将向昆虫传粉转变,这种生物转变在过渡带或过渡带中变得更加突出。如果传粉者选择具有特定花性状和开花物候的植物,以最大限度地获取花资源(花蜜),那么传粉者群落的这种转变可能会影响植物群落。然而,考察传粉者相互作用(如促进和竞争)在植物群落沿海拔梯度聚集中的相对作用的实证研究有限。本文利用植物性状、传粉者、开花物候和群落系统发育数据相结合的综合框架,揭示了促进性和竞争性相互作用在锡金-喜马拉雅地区沿海拔梯度的杜鹃花群落聚集中的相对作用。我们发现证据表明,在低海拔地区,杜鹃花群落是由促进和竞争共同构成的。相比之下,过渡区和高海拔地区的社区仅由竞争构成。在低海拔地区,花冠长度、花期物候和花蜜量表现出显著的表型聚类,支持了促进作用,而其他性状则过于分散,表明竞争的作用。此外,低海拔杜鹃群落的系统发育结构以集群为主。而在过渡带和高海拔地区则表现为分散和随机的系统发育结构。研究发现,与高海拔群落相比,低海拔群落的花期物候重叠较多,传粉者相似度较低。我们认为,在喜马拉雅地区,即使在很小的空间尺度上,间接的生物相互作用也可能对相互依赖的高山植物群落的聚集起重要作用。总的来说,我们的研究结果强调了在评估植物群落组装过程时将植物-传粉者相互作用作为重要驱动因素的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Floral traits and community phylogenetic structure shape plant-pollinator interactions in co-occurring Rhododendrons in the Himalaya

Elevation gradients of mountains serve as ideal settings to test the impact of pollinators on plant community assemblages. A shift from bird to insect-mediated pollination is expected with an increase in elevation, and such biotic shifts become more prominent in transition zones or ecotones. This shift in pollinator communities may influence plant communities if pollinators select plants with a specific set of floral traits and flowering phenology to maximize their floral resource (nectar) acquisition. However, empirical studies that examine the relative role of pollinator interactions (such as facilitation and competition) in the assembly of plant communities along elevation gradients are limited. Here we use an integrative framework combining floral traits, pollinators, flowering phenology and community phylogenetic data to reveal the relative role of facilitative and competitive interactions in the assembly of Rhododendron communities along elevation gradients in the Sikkim Himalaya. We find evidence that at lower elevations the Rhododendron community is structured by both facilitation and competition. In contrast, communities in the transition zone and at higher elevations are structured by competition alone. In lower elevations, corolla length, followed by the start of flowering phenology and nectar volume, showed significant phenotypic clustering and supported the facilitation while all other traits were overdispersed, suggesting the role of competition. Furthermore, a clustered phylogenetic structure was predominately observed at lower-elevation Rhododendron communities. In comparison, a dispersed and random phylogenetic structure was observed in the transition zone and at higher elevations. We observed greater overlap in flowering phenology and less pollinator similarity in lower elevation communities, compared to those in higher reaches.

We suggest that in the Himalaya, even at small spatial scales, indirect biotic interactions may significantly contribute to the assembly of interdependent alpine plant communities. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of considering plant-pollinator interactions as important drivers when evaluating plant community assembly processes.

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CiteScore
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