Trait‐based effects of plant invasion on floral resources, hoverflies and bees

Author:

Szigeti Viktor1ORCID,Fenesi Annamária2,Botta‐Dukát Zoltán3,Kuhlmann Michael4,Potts Simon G.5,Roberts Stuart5,Soltész Zoltán1,Török Edina26,Kovács‐Hostyánszki Anikó1

Affiliation:

1. Lendület Ecosystem Services Research Group Institute of Ecology and Botany, Centre for Ecological Research Vácrátót Hungary

2. Hungarian Department of Biology and Ecology Babeş‐Bolyai University Cluj‐Napoca Romania

3. Large‐scale Vegetation Ecology Research Group Institute of Ecology and Botany, Centre for Ecological Research Vácrátót Hungary

4. Zoological Museum of Kiel University Kiel Germany

5. Centre for Agri‐Environmental Research School of Agriculture, Policy and Development, University of Reading Reading UK

6. Lendület Landscape and Conservation Ecology Institute of Ecology and Botany, Centre for Ecological Research Vácrátót Hungary

Abstract

AbstractPlant invasions can lead to homogeneous communities with decreased functional diversity. However, invasive plants, with various morphological and phenological traits, may drive pollinator communities in a less predictable, more complex way. They can promote pollinators compatible with their floral traits, while leaving others without foraging resources. Our observational study on 10 invasive herbaceous species applied a trait‐based approach to investigate plant invasion‐driven changes in floral resources, hoverfly and bee communities. We sampled invaded and non‐invaded (control) sites before and during the flowering of the invasive plants. We analysed the differences in floral traits between invasive and native plants, functional diversity and trait distributions of flower and pollinator communities between the invaded and control sites. Five invasive plant species differed from natives in floral traits. Plant invasion caused species‐specific changes in functional diversity and trait distributions of communities. For instance, invaded sites had a decreased functional diversity of hoverflies before flowering of invasive species, and larger hoverflies during flowering of invasive species compared with control sites. Smaller bees were associated with invasive plants with shallow flowers, while larger and long‐tongued bees were associated with two invasive species with restricted floral access. Similar to previous studies, pollinator traits showed mixed or neutral responses to plant invasion. This is probably due to the high integration capability of invasive plants into plant‐pollinator systems, or limitations in sampling, trait resolution, and unrevealed environmental factors. We provide recommendations for future studies to better understand the trait‐based community composition of flowering plants and pollinators.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

National Research, Development and Innovation Office

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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