Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
Logo du site
  • English
  • Français
  • Se connecter
  1. Accueil
  2. Université de Neuchâtel
  3. Publications
  4. Should food-deceptive species flower before or after rewarding species? An experimental test of pollinator visitation behaviour under contrasting phenologies
 
  • Details
Options
Vignette d'image

Should food-deceptive species flower before or after rewarding species? An experimental test of pollinator visitation behaviour under contrasting phenologies

Auteur(s)
Internicola, Antonina I.
Bernasconi, Giorgina
Gigord, Luc D. B.
Date de parution
2008
In
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, Wiley, 2008/21/5/1358-1365
Mots-clés
  • artificial inflorescences
  • <i>Bombus terrestris</i>
  • corolla colour similarity
  • deceptive pollination
  • flowering phenology
  • pollinator behaviour
  • pollinator learning
  • artificial infloresce...

  • <i>Bombus terrestris<...

  • corolla colour simila...

  • deceptive pollination...

  • flowering phenology

  • pollinator behaviour

  • pollinator learning

Résumé
Many plant species reward their pollinators, whereas some species, particularly among orchids, do not. Similarity of floral cues between co-flowering species influences how rapidly pollinators learn to avoid deceptive plants. This learning process, which affects the reproductive success of deceptive plants, may additionally depend on relative timing of flowering of sympatric rewarding and deceptive species. We tested the combined effects of corolla colour similarity and flowering order of rewarding and deceptive artificial inflorescences on visitation by naïve bumblebees. When deceptive inflorescences were offered after rewarding inflorescences, bumblebees visited them four times more often if both species were similar compared with when they were dissimilar. Pollinator visitation rate to deceptive inflorescences offered before rewarding inflorescences was intermediate and independent of similarity. Thus, early-flowering deceptive species avoid the costs of dissimilarity with rewarding species. This mechanism may favour adaptive evolution of flowering phenology in deceptive species and explain why temperate deceptive orchids usually flower earlier than rewarding ones.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/14697
_
10.1111/j.1420-9101.2008.01565.x
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: Internicola_A.I._-_Should_food-deceptive_species_flower_before_20091229.pdf (474.59 KB)
google-scholar
Présentation du portailGuide d'utilisationStratégie Open AccessDirective Open Access La recherche à l'UniNE Open Access ORCIDNouveautés

Service information scientifique & bibliothèques
Rue Emile-Argand 11
2000 Neuchâtel
contact.libra@unine.ch

Propulsé par DSpace, DSpace-CRIS & 4Science | v2022.02.00