| Literature DB >> 31362606 |
Carolina Diller1, Miguel Castañeda-Zárate1, Steven D Johnson1.
Abstract
Bird pollination systems are dominated by specialist nectarivores, such as hummingbirds in the Americas and sunbirds in Africa. Opportunistic (generalist) avian nectarivores such as orioles, weavers and bulbuls have also been implicated as plant pollinators, but their effectiveness as agents of pollen transfer is poorly known. Here, we compare the single-visit effectiveness of specialist and opportunistic avian nectarivores as pollinators of Aloe ferox, a plant that relies almost exclusively on birds for seed production. We found that the number of pollen grains on stigmas of flowers receiving single visits by opportunistic avian nectarivores was approximately threefold greater than on those receiving single visits by specialist sunbirds and about twofold greater than on those that received single visits by honeybees. The number of pollen grains on stigmas of flowers visited by sunbirds was similar to that on stigmas of unvisited flowers. These results show that opportunistic birds are highly effective pollinators of A. ferox, supporting the idea that some plants are specialized for pollination by opportunistic birds.Entities:
Keywords: bird pollination; opportunistic nectarivores; pollination efficiency; single-visit deposit; sunbirds
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31362606 PMCID: PMC6684984 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2019.0349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703