| Literature DB >> 18431488 |
Sean A Rands1, Heather M Whitney.
Abstract
As well as nutritional rewards, some plants also reward ectothermic pollinators with warmth. Bumble bees have some control over their temperature, but have been shown to forage at warmer flowers when given a choice, suggesting that there is some advantage to them of foraging at warm flowers (such as reducing the energy required to raise their body to flight temperature before leaving the flower). We describe a model that considers how a heat reward affects the foraging behaviour in a thermogenic central-place forager (such as a bumble bee). We show that although the pollinator should spend a longer time on individual flowers if they are warm, the increase in total visit time is likely to be small. The pollinator's net rate of energy gain will be increased by landing on warmer flowers. Therefore, if a plant provides a heat reward, it could reduce the amount of nectar it produces, whilst still providing its pollinator with the same net rate of gain. We suggest how heat rewards may link with plant life history strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18431488 PMCID: PMC2292243 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Sketch diagram of the model's components.
Figure 2Effect of floral temperature on visit timing and gain rate.
Showing effect on a) the time at which active heating begins, t, and the departure time t, and b) gain rate, r. Parameters as described in the methods section, but with θ systematically adjusted.
Effects of model parameters on visit length t.
| variable | description | effects of increasing variable on visit length, |
|
| gain curve shallowness | increases |
|
| cost of foraging whilst passively cooling | decreases |
|
| cost of travel | increases |
|
| cost of foraging whilst actively warming | decreases |
|
| maximum gain from flower | decreases |
|
| cooling conductivity | decreases |
|
| warming conductivity | increases |
| τ | travel time | increases |
| θ | floral temperature | increases |
| θ | asymptotic temperature | increases |
| θ | travel temperature | decreases |
Figure 3An increase in floral temperature means that nectar production can be reduced.
a) Lines show paired values of floral temperature (shown as the difference between floral temperature and take-off temperature, θ−θ) and gain shallowness constant A (where a larger value means that it takes longer for the bee to collect a given amount of nectar), yielding the same optimal net rate of gain (for illustrative purposes, the lines represent the isocline where r* = 0.05 J s−1); b) temperature and gain shallowness pairs yielding the same optimal visit length, t (for illustrative purposes, the lines represent the isocline where t* = 7.5 s). In both figures, the solid black line uses the standard parameter set as described in the methods section, where travel time τ = 10 s. The solid blue line uses the same parameter set, but τ = 20 s. The dotted and dashed lines demonstrate a change in the cost of flight c (standardised at 0.336 J s−1), representing one way in which non-floral environmental temperature can be included: the dotted lines use c = 0.9×0.336 J s−1, and the dashed lines use 1.1×0.336 J s−1.