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Site fidelity by bees drives pollination facilitation in sequentially blooming plant species
by
Thomson, James D.
, Ogilvie, Jane E.
in
Animals
/ associational effects
/ Bees
/ Bees - physiology
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Bombus
/ Delphinium
/ Delphinium - physiology
/ Delphinium barbeyi
/ facilitation
/ floral resource
/ flowering
/ Flowers
/ Flowers & plants
/ Flowers - physiology
/ forage
/ foraging behavior
/ Gentiana
/ Gentiana - physiology
/ Gentiana parryi
/ magnet species effect
/ phenology
/ philopatry
/ Plant reproduction
/ Plant species
/ plant‐pollinator interaction
/ Pollen
/ Pollination
/ Pollination - physiology
/ Pollinators
/ Reproduction
/ reproductive success
/ resource depletion
/ sequential mutualism
/ Site fidelity
/ site fidelity
/ Success factors
2016
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Site fidelity by bees drives pollination facilitation in sequentially blooming plant species
by
Thomson, James D.
, Ogilvie, Jane E.
in
Animals
/ associational effects
/ Bees
/ Bees - physiology
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Bombus
/ Delphinium
/ Delphinium - physiology
/ Delphinium barbeyi
/ facilitation
/ floral resource
/ flowering
/ Flowers
/ Flowers & plants
/ Flowers - physiology
/ forage
/ foraging behavior
/ Gentiana
/ Gentiana - physiology
/ Gentiana parryi
/ magnet species effect
/ phenology
/ philopatry
/ Plant reproduction
/ Plant species
/ plant‐pollinator interaction
/ Pollen
/ Pollination
/ Pollination - physiology
/ Pollinators
/ Reproduction
/ reproductive success
/ resource depletion
/ sequential mutualism
/ Site fidelity
/ site fidelity
/ Success factors
2016
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Site fidelity by bees drives pollination facilitation in sequentially blooming plant species
by
Thomson, James D.
, Ogilvie, Jane E.
in
Animals
/ associational effects
/ Bees
/ Bees - physiology
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Bombus
/ Delphinium
/ Delphinium - physiology
/ Delphinium barbeyi
/ facilitation
/ floral resource
/ flowering
/ Flowers
/ Flowers & plants
/ Flowers - physiology
/ forage
/ foraging behavior
/ Gentiana
/ Gentiana - physiology
/ Gentiana parryi
/ magnet species effect
/ phenology
/ philopatry
/ Plant reproduction
/ Plant species
/ plant‐pollinator interaction
/ Pollen
/ Pollination
/ Pollination - physiology
/ Pollinators
/ Reproduction
/ reproductive success
/ resource depletion
/ sequential mutualism
/ Site fidelity
/ site fidelity
/ Success factors
2016
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Site fidelity by bees drives pollination facilitation in sequentially blooming plant species
Journal Article
Site fidelity by bees drives pollination facilitation in sequentially blooming plant species
2016
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Overview
Plant species can influence the pollination and reproductive success of coflowering neighbors that share pollinators. Because some individual pollinators habitually forage in particular areas, it is also possible that plant species could influence the pollination of neighbors that bloom later. When flowers of a preferred forage plant decline in an area, site‐fidelity may cause individual flower feeders to stay in an area and switch plant species rather than search for preferred plants in a new location. A newly blooming plant species may quickly inherit a set of visitors from a prior plant species, and therefore experience higher pollination success than it would in an area where the first species never bloomed. To test this, we manipulated the placement and timing of two plant species, Delphinium barbeyi and later‐blooming Gentiana parryi. We recorded the responses of individually marked bumble bee pollinators. About 63% of marked individuals returned repeatedly to the same areas to forage on Delphinium. When Delphinium was experimentally taken out of bloom, most of those site‐faithful individuals (78%) stayed and switched to Gentiana. Consequently, Gentiana flowers received more visits in areas where Delphinium had previously flowered, compared to areas where Delphinium was still flowering or never occurred. Gentiana stigmas received more pollen in areas where Delphinium disappeared than where it never bloomed, indicating that Delphinium increases the pollination of Gentiana when they are separated in time. Overall, we show that individual bumble bees are often site‐faithful, causing one plant species to increase the pollination of another even when separated in time, which is a novel mechanism of pollination facilitation.
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd,ECOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA,Ecological Society of America
Subject
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