Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system

There is growing concern that current pollinator decline will affect the reproduction of plant species, potentially driving a decline in plant population densities. We experimentally tested whether a reduction in flower visitation caused a reduction in fertilization rate in several species, and whet...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rebekka Lundgren, Amparo Lazáro, Ørjan Totland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Enviroquest Ltd. 2013-10-01
Series:Journal of Pollination Ecology
Online Access:https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/199
id doaj-4d9f0894105c4de19279cce18712aaa5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4d9f0894105c4de19279cce18712aaa52021-07-28T12:36:10ZengEnviroquest Ltd.Journal of Pollination Ecology1920-76032013-10-0111465610.26786/1920-7603(2013)584Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating systemRebekka LundgrenAmparo LazároØrjan TotlandThere is growing concern that current pollinator decline will affect the reproduction of plant species, potentially driving a decline in plant population densities. We experimentally tested whether a reduction in flower visitation caused a reduction in fertilization rate in several species, and whether any reduction in fecundity of species depends on their degree of reproductive dependence on pollinators and their attractiveness for pollinators. We recorded visitation rate, fertilization rate, seed weight, flower size and density of nineteen insect-pollinated perennial herbs inside thirty 2 x 2 m dome-shaped cages covered with fishnet (experimental plots) and in thirty control plots in a Norwegian hay meadow. We used a bagging experiment to estimate the ability of the study species to produce seeds in the absence of pollinators. The visitation rate for fifteen of nineteen study species was lower inside cages than outside and only three of the fifteen species showed significantly reduced fertilization rates in the experimental plots. The magnitude of reduction in fertilization rate was positively related to the degree of pollinator dependence, but not to their attractiveness for pollinators or to the reduction in visitation rate. Seed weight was not affected by the experiment. The lack of an overall effect of reduced pollinator visitation on fertilization rate suggests that some species may be robust to a pollinator decline that could increase pollen limitation on plant reproduction. Our results suggest that species with greater pollinator dependence are more vulnerable to pollinator loss.https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/199
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebekka Lundgren
Amparo Lazáro
Ørjan Totland
spellingShingle Rebekka Lundgren
Amparo Lazáro
Ørjan Totland
Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
Journal of Pollination Ecology
author_facet Rebekka Lundgren
Amparo Lazáro
Ørjan Totland
author_sort Rebekka Lundgren
title Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
title_short Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
title_full Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
title_fullStr Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
title_full_unstemmed Experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
title_sort experimental pollinator decline affects plant reproduction and is mediated by plant mating system
publisher Enviroquest Ltd.
series Journal of Pollination Ecology
issn 1920-7603
publishDate 2013-10-01
description There is growing concern that current pollinator decline will affect the reproduction of plant species, potentially driving a decline in plant population densities. We experimentally tested whether a reduction in flower visitation caused a reduction in fertilization rate in several species, and whether any reduction in fecundity of species depends on their degree of reproductive dependence on pollinators and their attractiveness for pollinators. We recorded visitation rate, fertilization rate, seed weight, flower size and density of nineteen insect-pollinated perennial herbs inside thirty 2 x 2 m dome-shaped cages covered with fishnet (experimental plots) and in thirty control plots in a Norwegian hay meadow. We used a bagging experiment to estimate the ability of the study species to produce seeds in the absence of pollinators. The visitation rate for fifteen of nineteen study species was lower inside cages than outside and only three of the fifteen species showed significantly reduced fertilization rates in the experimental plots. The magnitude of reduction in fertilization rate was positively related to the degree of pollinator dependence, but not to their attractiveness for pollinators or to the reduction in visitation rate. Seed weight was not affected by the experiment. The lack of an overall effect of reduced pollinator visitation on fertilization rate suggests that some species may be robust to a pollinator decline that could increase pollen limitation on plant reproduction. Our results suggest that species with greater pollinator dependence are more vulnerable to pollinator loss.
url https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/199
work_keys_str_mv AT rebekkalundgren experimentalpollinatordeclineaffectsplantreproductionandismediatedbyplantmatingsystem
AT amparolazaro experimentalpollinatordeclineaffectsplantreproductionandismediatedbyplantmatingsystem
AT ørjantotland experimentalpollinatordeclineaffectsplantreproductionandismediatedbyplantmatingsystem
_version_ 1721278543522955264