夏威夷群岛新森林中鸟类和蜜蜂的授粉和花蜜盗窃

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Pryce W. Millikin, Samuel B. Case, C. Tarwater
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本地物种的灭绝和非本地物种的引入可能导致生物相互作用的破坏。授粉是一个重要的生态系统过程,通常需要动物和植物之间的相互作用。非本地动物可能与本地开花植物相互作用,有可能在没有授粉的情况下授粉或窃取花蜜(盗窃)。在夏威夷群岛,许多本地植物失去了它们原来的传粉者。众所周知,鸟类和昆虫会拜访本地植物的花朵,但不清楚它们是授粉还是偷花蜜,本地和非本地物种与花的相互作用是否不同,以及是什么影响了对花的访问。在奥胡岛,我们部署了相机陷阱,并对夏威夷四种濒危的半边莲进行了亲自观察。我们观察到鸟类、哺乳动物和昆虫访花,以本地鸟类和本地蜜蜂访花最频繁。无论原生还是非原生状态,蜜蜂在大多数访问期间(90.5%的访问)与生殖结构接触,而鸟类在大多数访问期间(99.3%的访问)窃取花蜜。蜜蜂和鸟类的到访随着焦点植物上花朵的数量而增加。访鸟量随冠层盖度和近同种花数量的增加而增加,随近异种花数量的减少而减少。我们的研究结果表明,蜜蜂可能会传粉历史上鸟类传粉的植物,而本地和非本地鸟类对这些植物的影响是中性或负面的。总的来说,我们有助于理解原生植物授粉如何在不断变化的生态系统中被改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pollination and nectar larceny by birds and bees in novel forests of the Hawaiian Islands
The extinction of native species and introduction of non-native species may lead to the disruption of biotic interactions. Pollination is a critical ecosystem process that often requires mutualisms between animals and plants. Non-native animals may interact with native flowering plants, with the potential to pollinate or steal nectar (larceny) from flowers without pollination. In the Hawaiian Islands, many native plants have lost their original pollinators. Birds and insects are known to visit native plant flowers, but it is unclear whether they pollinate or steal nectar, whether native and non-native species differ in their interactions with flowers, and what influences visitation to flowers. On Oʻahu, we deployed camera traps and conducted in-person observations on four at-risk species of Hawaiian lobelioids (Campanulaceae). We observed birds, mammals, and insects visiting flowers, with a native bird and native bee visiting most frequently. Regardless of native versus non-native status, bees made contact with reproductive structures during most visits (90.5% of visits), while birds stole nectar during most visits (99.3% of visits). Bee and bird visitation increased with the number of flowers on focal plants. Bird visitation also increased with canopy cover and the number of nearby conspecific flowers and decreased with the number of nearby heterospecific flowers. Our results indicate that bees may pollinate plants that were historically bird-pollinated, while native and non-native birds have neutral or negative impacts on these plants. Broadly, we contribute to an understanding of how native plant pollination can be altered in changing ecosystems.
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来源期刊
Journal of Pollination Ecology
Journal of Pollination Ecology Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
17 weeks
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