| Literature DB >> 26742956 |
Beyte Barrios1, Sean R Pena2, Andrea Salas3, Suzanne Koptur3.
Abstract
Pollination studies often use visitation frequency of potential pollinators as an indicator of their importance, but this is only one component and may not reflect actual pollen transfer rates. In this study, we determine the most effective pollinator group of Angadenia berteroi, a tropical perennial subshrub with large yellow flowers that set few fruits. We determined visitation frequency and pollen transfer effectiveness of the four most common groups of visitors (long- and short-tongued bees, and skipper and non-skipper butterflies). Using potted plants, we exposed flowers to single visits from different types of pollinators to measure fruit set. We demonstrate that A. berteroi is most effectively pollinated by long-tongued bees, though many other species visit the flowers; the most frequent visitor group is not the most important pollinator, because they neither carry nor deposit much pollen, as the width of their proboscis is small compared with long-tongued bees. In this system, the width of the proboscis of the pollinators correlates with pollen transfer efficiency. Our results demonstrate the importance of pollen removal, pollen deposition, and fruit set, in determining the most effective pollinators, rather than visitor frequency. The distinctive morphology of these flowers, with a large bell and a narrow, short tube, suggests that other flowers of this shape may similarly benefit more from visitors with mouthparts shorter than previously considered optimal. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company.Entities:
Keywords: Apocynaceae; Hymenoptera; Lepidoptera; floral visitors; pine rocklands; pollen transfer efficiency; pollination
Year: 2016 PMID: 26742956 PMCID: PMC4779295 DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plw001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AoB Plants Impact factor: 3.276
Figure 1.Diagram of A. berteroi flower. (A) Lateral view of the whole flower. (B) Abaxial view of the whole flower. Arrow points to floral tube constriction (from Barrios and Koptur 2011). (C) Style head. (1) Apical part; (2) medium secretory area and (3) receptive area. (D) Longitudinal section of the flower, and enlarged view of the anthers. (E) Diagram of the head of a bee showing how the head width and the proboscis length were measured.
Figure 2.(A) Longitudinal section of flower showing pollen deposited by dehisced anther on the style head, forming the pollen chamber. Arrows point to the middle of the style head and the anthers. (B) Proboscis of the pollinator bearing exogenous pollen inserted into the floral tube. (C) As the mouthparts are retracted, exogenous pollen is deposited into the receptive area of the style head. The proboscis may also contact glue-applying midsection of style head and pick up pollen from flower just visited (not shown).
Flower visitors of A. berteroi observed in the study sites, and presence/absence of pollen on the proboscis.
| Visitor type | Scientific name | Pollen on proboscis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long-tongued bee | 13 | Yes | |
| Long-tongued bee | 4 | Yes | |
| Short-tongued bee | 2 | No | |
| Short-tongued bee | 4 | No | |
| Non-skipper butterfly | 1 | No | |
| Non-skipper butterfly | 4 | Yes | |
| Skipper | 3 | No | |
| Skipper | 1 | No | |
| Skipper | 2 | No | |
| Skipper | 2 | No | |
| Skipper | 13 | No | |
| Skipper | 5 | No |
Percentage of visits and foraging behaviour of A. berteroi visitors. n, sample size. Lengths of visits with the same letters are not significantly different with Kruskal–Wallis analysis.
| Visitor group | Percentage of total visits | Percentage returned to the same flower | Percentage moved to another | Average length of visit (s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Long-tongued bees | 45 | 29.4 | 0 | 15.6 | 7.8 ± 4.9a |
| Short-tongued bees | 26 | 16.9 | 3.8 | 7.6 | 6.7 ± 3.3a |
| Non-skipper butterflies | 15 | 9.8 | 26.7 | 33.3 | 9.0 ± 14.4a |
| Skippers | 67 | 43.8 | 14.3 | 26.9 | 10.0 ± 5.9b |
Percentage of flower visitors with pollen on the proboscis. Pollinator importance was calculated as visitation rate × pollen removal.
| Visitor group | Percentage with pollen on the proboscis | Average number of pollen grains | Pollinator importance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Long-tongued bees | 17 | 76.5 | 82.9 ± 69.8 | 2437.26 |
| Short-tongued bees | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Non-skipper butterflies | 5 | 40.0 | 2.6 ± 4.3 | 25.48 |
| Skippers | 26 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Proboscis measurements (mean and standard error) for flower visitors to A. berteroi. Proboscis width and length with the same letters are not significantly different with Tukey comparisons.
| Visitor group | Proboscis width (mm) | Proboscis length (mm) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long-tongued bees | 17 | 0.70 ± 0.15a | 4.95 ± 1.14a |
| Short-tongued bees | 4 | 0.28 ± 0.29b | 1.88 ± 0.79a |
| Non-skipper butterflies | 4 | 0.22 ± 0.56b | 11.39 ± 0.08b |
| Skippers | 26 | 0.21 ± 0.16b | 8.52 ± 4.73b |
Figure 3.Mean and standard error of the number of pollen grains on fishing line of increasing width inserted into flowers of A. berteroi. The diameter of 0.20 mm approximates the diameter of the proboscis of skippers, 0.23 mm represents non-skipper butterflies, 0.28 mm represents short-tongued bees and 0.53 mm represents long-tongued bees. Sample size = 50 in each group. To aid interpretation, the number of ovules ranges from 46 to 76 ovules per flower. Diameters with the same letters are not significantly different with Kruskal–Wallis analysis.
Figure 4.Mean and standard error of the length of the stigmatic surface stained with methylene blue. The diameter of 0.20 mm approximates the diameter of the proboscis of skippers, 0.23 mm represents non-skipper butterflies, 0.28 mm represents short-tongued bees and 0.53 mm represents long-tongued bees. Sample size = 23 per group. Diameters with the same letters are not significantly different with Tukey comparisons.