Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)

Different suites of floral traits are associated with historical selection by particular functional groups of pollinators, but contemporary floral phenotypes are not necessarily good predictors of a plant’s effective pollinators. To determine the extent to which plant species specialize on particula...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laura A. D. Doubleday, Chris G. Eckert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Enviroquest Ltd. 2018-03-01
Series:Journal of Pollination Ecology
Online Access:https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/453
id doaj-95781d9789224eb6b3504d3b11bdd25e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-95781d9789224eb6b3504d3b11bdd25e2021-07-28T12:30:21ZengEnviroquest Ltd.Journal of Pollination Ecology1920-76032018-03-0122677410.26786/1920-7603(2018)six268Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)Laura A. D. Doubleday0Chris G. Eckert1University of Massachusetts AmherstQueen's UniversityDifferent suites of floral traits are associated with historical selection by particular functional groups of pollinators, but contemporary floral phenotypes are not necessarily good predictors of a plant’s effective pollinators. To determine the extent to which plant species specialize on particular functional groups of pollinators, it is important to quantify visitation rates for the full spectrum of flower visitors as well as to experimentally assess the contributions of each functional group to plant reproduction. We assessed whether attracting both diurnal and nocturnal flower visitors corresponded to pollination generalization or specialization in the Pacific coastal dune endemic Abronia umbellata var. umbellata. In multiple populations over two years, we observed flower visitors during the day and at night to assess visitation rates by different insect groups and conducted pollinator exclusion experiments to assess the contributions of diurnal and nocturnal visitors to seed production. Flower visitation rates were 8.67 times higher during the day than at night, but nocturnal visitation resulted in significantly higher seed set, suggesting that nocturnal noctuid and sphingid moths are the chief pollinators. Most diurnal visitors were honey bees, with tongues too short to reach A. umbellata nectar or contact stigmas and effect pollination. The prevalence of honey bees, combined with the lack of successful seed production resulting from diurnal pollination, suggests that honey bees are pollen thieves that collect pollen but do not deposit it on stigmas. Our results underscore the need to experimentally assess the contributions of different groups of flower visitors to plant reproduction.https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/453
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura A. D. Doubleday
Chris G. Eckert
spellingShingle Laura A. D. Doubleday
Chris G. Eckert
Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
Journal of Pollination Ecology
author_facet Laura A. D. Doubleday
Chris G. Eckert
author_sort Laura A. D. Doubleday
title Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
title_short Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
title_full Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
title_fullStr Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
title_full_unstemmed Experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>Abronia umbellata</i> (Nyctaginaceae)
title_sort experimental evidence for predominant nocturnal pollination despite more frequent diurnal visitation in <i>abronia umbellata</i> (nyctaginaceae)
publisher Enviroquest Ltd.
series Journal of Pollination Ecology
issn 1920-7603
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Different suites of floral traits are associated with historical selection by particular functional groups of pollinators, but contemporary floral phenotypes are not necessarily good predictors of a plant’s effective pollinators. To determine the extent to which plant species specialize on particular functional groups of pollinators, it is important to quantify visitation rates for the full spectrum of flower visitors as well as to experimentally assess the contributions of each functional group to plant reproduction. We assessed whether attracting both diurnal and nocturnal flower visitors corresponded to pollination generalization or specialization in the Pacific coastal dune endemic Abronia umbellata var. umbellata. In multiple populations over two years, we observed flower visitors during the day and at night to assess visitation rates by different insect groups and conducted pollinator exclusion experiments to assess the contributions of diurnal and nocturnal visitors to seed production. Flower visitation rates were 8.67 times higher during the day than at night, but nocturnal visitation resulted in significantly higher seed set, suggesting that nocturnal noctuid and sphingid moths are the chief pollinators. Most diurnal visitors were honey bees, with tongues too short to reach A. umbellata nectar or contact stigmas and effect pollination. The prevalence of honey bees, combined with the lack of successful seed production resulting from diurnal pollination, suggests that honey bees are pollen thieves that collect pollen but do not deposit it on stigmas. Our results underscore the need to experimentally assess the contributions of different groups of flower visitors to plant reproduction.
url https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/453
work_keys_str_mv AT lauraaddoubleday experimentalevidenceforpredominantnocturnalpollinationdespitemorefrequentdiurnalvisitationiniabroniaumbellatainyctaginaceae
AT chrisgeckert experimentalevidenceforpredominantnocturnalpollinationdespitemorefrequentdiurnalvisitationiniabroniaumbellatainyctaginaceae
_version_ 1721278573800587264