Individual flowering phenology shapes plant–pollinator interactions across ecological scales affecting plant reproduction

Author:

Labonté Audrey1ORCID,Monticelli Lucie S.12ORCID,Turpin Mélinda1,Felten Emeline1,Laurent Emilien1,Matejicek Annick1,Biju‐Duval Luc1,Ducourtieux Chantal1,Vieren Eric1,Deytieux Violaine3,Cordeau Stéphane1ORCID,Bohan David1,Vanbergen Adam J.1

Affiliation:

1. Agroécologie, INRAE, Institut Agro Univ. Bourgogne, Univ. Bourgogne Franche‐Comté Dijon France

2. Université Côte d'Azur, INRAE, CNRS, UMR ISA Nice France

3. Unité Expérimentale du Domaine d'Epoisses U2E, INRAE Bretenière France

Abstract

AbstractThe balance of pollination competition and facilitation among co‐flowering plants and abiotic resource availability can modify plant species and individual reproduction. Floral resource succession and spatial heterogeneity modulate plant–pollinator interactions across ecological scales (individual plant, local assemblage, and interaction network of agroecological infrastructure across the farm). Intraspecific variation in flowering phenology can modulate the precise level of spatio‐temporal heterogeneity in floral resources, pollen donor density, and pollinator interactions that a plant individual is exposed to, thereby affecting reproduction. We tested how abiotic resources and multi‐scale plant–pollinator interactions affected individual plant seed set modulated by intraspecific variation in flowering phenology and spatio‐temporal floral heterogeneity arising from agroecological infrastructure. We transplanted two focal insect‐pollinated plant species (Cyanus segetum and Centaurea jacea, n = 288) into agroecological infrastructure (10 sown wildflower and six legume–grass strips) across a farm‐scale experiment (125 ha). We applied an individual‐based phenologically explicit approach to match precisely the flowering period of plant individuals to the concomitant level of spatio‐temporal heterogeneity in plant–pollinator interactions, potential pollen donors, floral resources, and abiotic conditions (temperature, water, and nitrogen). Individual plant attractiveness, assemblage floral density, and conspecific pollen donor density (C. jacea) improved seed set. Network linkage density increased focal species seed set and modified the effect of local assemblage richness and abundance on C. segetum. Mutual dependence on pollinators in networks increased C. segetum seed set, while C. jacea seed set was greatest where both specialization on pollinators and mutual dependence was high. Abiotic conditions were of little or no importance to seed set. Intra‐ and interspecific plant–pollinator interactions respond to spatio‐temporal heterogeneity arising from agroecological management affecting wild plant species reproduction. The interplay of pollinator interactions within and between ecological scales affecting seed set implies a co‐occurrence of pollinator‐mediated facilitative and competitive interactions among plant species and individuals.

Funder

European Commission

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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