| Literature DB >> 33942455 |
Alba Cervantes-Loreto1, Carolyn A Ayers2, Emily K Dobbs2, Berry J Brosi3, Daniel B Stouffer1.
Abstract
Animals often change their behaviour in the presence of other species and the environmental context they experience, and these changes can substantially modify the course their populations follow. In the case of animals involved in mutualistic interactions, it is still unclear how to incorporate the effects of these behavioural changes into population dynamics. We propose a framework for using pollinator functional responses to examine the roles of pollinator-pollinator interactions and abiotic conditions in altering the times between floral visits of a focal pollinator. We then apply this framework to a unique foraging experiment with different models that allow resource availability and sublethal exposure to a neonicotinoid pesticide to modify how pollinators forage alone and with co-foragers. We found that all co-foragers interfere with the focal pollinator under at least one set of abiotic conditions; for most species, interference was strongest at higher levels of resource availability and with pesticide exposure. Overall our results highlight that density-dependent responses are often context-dependent themselves.Entities:
Keywords: density dependence; foraging chamber; interaction modification; pollinator competition; pollinator functional responses; visitation rates
Year: 2021 PMID: 33942455 DOI: 10.1111/ele.13765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492