Literature DB >> 27864943

"Hummingbird" floral traits interact synergistically to discourage visitation by bumble bee foragers.

Robert J Gegear1, Rebecca Burns1, Katharine A Swoboda-Bhattarai1.   

Abstract

Pollination syndromes are suites of floral traits presumed to reflect adaptations to attract and utilize a "primary" type of animal pollinator. However, syndrome traits may also function to deter "secondary" flower visitors that reduce plant fitness through their foraging activities. Here we use the hummingbird-pollinated plant species Mimulus cardinalis as a model to investigate the potential deterrent effects of classic bird syndrome traits on bumble bee foragers. To establish that M. cardinalis flowers elicit an avoidance response in bees, we assessed the choice behavior of individual foragers on a mixed experimental array of M. cardinalis and its bee-pollinated sister species M. lewisii. As expected, bees showed a strong preference against M. cardinalis flowers (only 22% of total bee visits were to M. cardinalis), but surprisingly also showed a high degree of individual specialization (95.2% of total plant transitions were between conspecifics). To determine M. cardinalis floral traits that discourage bee visitation, we then assessed foraging responses of individuals to M. cardinalis-like and M. lewisii-like floral models differing in color, orientation, reward, and combinations thereof. Across experiments, M. cardinalis-like trait combinations consistently produced a higher degree of flower avoidance behavior and individual specialization than expected based on bee responses to each trait in isolation. We then conducted a series of flower discrimination experiments to assess the ability of bees to utilize traits and trait combinations associated with each species. Relative to M. lewisii-like alternatives, M. cardinalis-like traits alone had a minimal effect on bee foraging proficiency but together increased the time bees spent searching for rewarding flowers from 1.49 to 2.65 s per visit. Collectively, our results show that M. cardinalis flowers impose foraging costs on bumble bees sufficient to discourage visitation and remarkably, generate such costs through synergistic color-orientation and color-reward trait interactions. Floral syndromes therefore represent complex adaptations to multiple pollinator groups, rather than simply the primary pollinator.
© 2016 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990Mimuluszzm321990; bumble bee; complex adaptation; floral specialization; multi-sensory floral signal; multisensory integration; plant-pollinator interactions; pollination syndrome; secondary pollinator

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 27864943     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  4 in total

1.  Scent matters: differential contribution of scent to insect response in flowers with insect vs. wind pollination traits.

Authors:  Theresa N Wang; Marie R Clifford; Jesús Martínez-Gómez; Jens C Johnson; Jeffrey A Riffell; Verónica S Di Stilio
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2019-01-23       Impact factor: 4.357

2.  Biomechanics of nectar feeding explain flower orientation in plants pollinated by long-proboscid flies.

Authors:  Sam McCarren; Jeremy J Midgley; Steven D Johnson
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2022-08-27

3.  Multimodal cues provide redundant information for bumblebees when the stimulus is visually salient, but facilitate red target detection in a naturalistic background.

Authors:  Francismeire Jane Telles; Guadalupe Corcobado; Alejandro Trillo; Miguel A Rodríguez-Gironés
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Ancient and recent introgression shape the evolutionary history of pollinator adaptation and speciation in a model monkeyflower radiation (Mimulus section Erythranthe).

Authors:  Thomas C Nelson; Angela M Stathos; Daniel D Vanderpool; Findley R Finseth; Yao-Wu Yuan; Lila Fishman
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2021-02-22       Impact factor: 5.917

  4 in total

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