Bird and insect pollinators differ in specialization and potential pollination services along disturbance and resource gradients

Author:

Neu Alexander12ORCID,Cooksley Huw3ORCID,Esler Karen J.4ORCID,Pauw Anton5ORCID,Roets Francois4ORCID,Schurr Frank M.3ORCID,Schleuning Matthias1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (SBiK‐F) Frankfurt am Main Germany

2. Goethe University Frankfurt Frankfurt am Main Germany

3. Institute of Landscape and Plant Ecology University of Hohenheim Stuttgart Germany

4. Department of Conservation Ecology and Entomology Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

5. Department of Botany and Zoology Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

Abstract

AbstractCombined studies of the communities and interaction networks of bird and insect pollinators are rare, especially along environmental gradients. Here, we determined how disturbance by fire and variation in sugar resources shape pollinator communities and interactions between plants and their pollinating insects and birds. We recorded insect and bird visits to 21 Protea species across 21 study sites and for 2 years in Fynbos ecosystems in the Western Cape, South Africa. We recorded morphological traits of all pollinator species (41 insect and nine bird species). For each site, we obtained estimates of the time since the last fire (range: 2–25 calendar years) and the Protea nectar sugar amount per hectare (range: 74–62 000 g/ha). We tested how post‐fire age and sugar amount influence the total interaction frequency, species richness and functional diversity of pollinator communities, as well as pollinator specialization (the effective number of plant partners) and potential pollination services (pollination service index) of insects and birds. We found little variation in the total interaction frequency, species richness and functional diversity of insect and bird pollinator communities, but insect species richness increased with post‐fire age. Pollinator specialization and potential pollination services of insects and birds varied differently along the environmental gradients. Bird pollinators visited fewer Protea species at sites with high sugar amount, while there was no such trend for insects. Potential pollination services of insect pollinators to Protea species decreased with increasing post‐fire age and resource amounts, whereas potential pollination services of birds remained constant along the environmental gradients. Despite little changes in pollinator communities, our analyses reveal that insect and bird pollinators differ in their specialization on Protea species and show distinct responses to disturbance and resource gradients. Our comparative study of bird and insect pollinators demonstrates that birds may be able to provide more stable pollination services than insects.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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