Pollen limitation and context‐dependent alleviating mechanisms in a co‐flowering alpine grassland community

Author:

Wang Yuxian12ORCID,Gao Erliang1,Hou Meng13,Ghazoul Jaboury2,Zhao Zhigang1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐ecosystems, College of Ecology, Lanzhou Univ. Lanzhou PR China

2. Ecosystem Management, Dept of Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

3. Key Laboratory of Wetland Ecology and Environment, Northeast Inst. of geography and agroecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Changchun PR China

Abstract

The consequences of community metrics (e.g. co‐flowering diversity and floral density) and plant traits (e.g. pollinator dependency and trait similarity) on pollen limitation (PL) may depend on pollinator‐mediated competitive or facilitative interactions among plants in co‐flowering communities, which could vary with community contexts (i.e. different altitude communities) and under human disturbances (e.g. livestock grazing). However, the mechanisms to alleviate PL under different contexts, considering pollinator‐mediated interactions among neighboring plants are unclear. We investigated PL under grazing versus ungrazing conditions in low versus high altitude alpine meadows on the Tibetan Plateau to uncover the underlying mechanisms mediating PL associated with livestock grazing. We found that PL is prevalent in alpine grasslands, irrespective of community contexts. Grazing exclusion decreased PL in the two sites but in different ways. At the high‐altitude site, PL was reduced by the exclusion of grazers through increased trait similarity (suggesting facilitation). While PL was reduced by decreased trait similarity (suggesting competition avoidance) under grazing exclusion at the low‐altitude site. Our results provide a mechanistic understanding of PL in co‐flowering alpine grassland communities under distinct human disturbances at different altitudes, emphasizing the role of pollinator‐mediated interactions among plants on plant reproductive success.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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