Butterflies, bumblebees and hoverflies are equally effective pollinators of Knautia arvensis (Caprifoliaceae), a generalist plant species with compound inflorescences

Author:

Ollerton Jeff12ORCID,Coulthard Emma13,Tarrant Sam1,Woolford James4,Jorge Leonardo Ré5ORCID,Rech André Rodrigo6

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Arts, Science and Technology University of Northampton, University Drive Northampton UK

2. Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming Institute of Botany Kunming China

3. Faculty of Science and Engineering Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

4. Microbiology Department Weetabix Ltd Kettering UK

5. Department of Ecology Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech Republic

6. Faculdade Interdisciplinar Em Humanidades Universidade Federal dos Vales Do Jequitinhonha e Mucuri Diamantina Brazil

Abstract

AbstractPlant‐pollinator interactions exist along a continuum from complete specialisation to highly generalised, that may vary in time and space. A long‐held assumption is that large bees are usually the most effective pollinators of generalist plants. We tested this by studying the relative importance of different groups of pollinators of Knautia arvensis (L.) Coult. (Caprifoliaceae: Dipsacoideae). This plant is suitable for such a study because it attracts a diversity of flower visitors, belonging to different functional groups. We asked whether all functional groups of pollinators are equally effective, or if one group is most effective, which has been documented in other species with apparently generalised pollination systems. We studied two subpopulations of K. arvensis, one at low and one at high density in Northampton, UK. To assess pollinator importance we exposed unvisited inflorescences to single visits by different groups of pollinators (butterflies, bumblebees, hoverflies and others) and assessed the proportion of pollinated stigmas. We then multiplied the effectiveness of each pollinator group with their proportional visitation frequency in five different years. For each group we also compared time spent on flowers and flight distance between visits. The relative importance of each pollinator group varied between years, as did their flight distances between flower visits. Butterflies were the best pollinators on a per visit basis (in terms of the proportion of stigmas pollinated) and flew further after visiting an inflorescence. Different measures and proxies of pollinator effectiveness varied between taxa, subpopulations, and years, and no one group of pollinators was consistently more effective than the others. Our results demonstrate the adaptive value of generalised pollination strategies when variation in relative abundance of different types of pollinators is considered. Such strategies may have buffered the ability of plants to reproduce during past periods of environmental change and may do so in the future.

Publisher

Wiley

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