Linking bees and flowers: How do floral communities structure pollinator communities?

被引:549
作者
Potts, SG
Vulliamy, B
Dafni, A
Ne'eman, G
Willmer, P
机构
[1] Univ St Andrews, Sch Biol, St Andrews KY16 9TS, Fife, Scotland
[2] Univ Haifa, Inst Evolut, IL-31905 Haifa, Israel
[3] Univ Haifa, Dept Biol, IL-36006 Tivon, Israel
关键词
bee diversity; community structure; energy partitioning; fire; grazing; Mediterranean; nectar; nest substrate availability; pollen;
D O I
10.1890/02-0136
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Pollinators provide essential ecosystem services, and declines in some pollinator communities around the world have been reported. Understanding the fundamental components defining these communities is essential if conservation and restoration are to be successful. We examined the structure of plant-pollinator communities in a dynamic Mediterranean landscape, comprising a mosaic of post-fire regenerating habitats, and which is a recognized global hotspot for bee diversity. Each community was characterized by a highly skewed species abundance distribution, with a few dominant and many rare bee species, and was consistent with a log series model indicating that a few environmental factors govern the community. Floral community composition, the quantity and quality of forage resources present, and the geographic locality organized bee communities at various levels: (1) The overall structure of the bee community (116 species), as revealed through ordination, was dependent upon nectar resource diversity (defined as the variety of nectar volume-concentration combinations available), the ratio of pollen to nectar energy, floral diversity, floral abundance, and post-fire age. (2) Bee diversity, measured as species richness, was closely linked to floral diversity (especially of annuals), nectar resource diversity, and post-fire age of the habitat. (3) The abundance of the most common species was primarily related to post-fire age, grazing intensity, and nesting substrate availability. Ordination models based on age-characteristic post-fire floral community structure explained 39-50% of overall variation observed in bee community structure. Cluster analysis showed that all the communities shared a high degree of similarity in their species composition (27-59%); however, the geographical location of sites also contributed a smaller but significant component to bee community structure. We conclude that floral resources act in specific and previously unexplored ways to modulate the diversity of the local geographic species pool, with specific disturbance factors, superimposed upon these patterns, mainly affecting the dominant species.
引用
收藏
页码:2628 / 2642
页数:15
相关论文
共 12 条
  • [1] Time is honey: circadian clocks of bees and flowers and how their interactions may influence ecological communities
    Bloch, Guy
    Bar-Shai, Noam
    Cytter, Yotam
    Green, Rachel
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2017, 372 (1734)
  • [2] A land for flowers and bees: studying pollination ecology in Mediterranean communities
    Petanidou, T
    Lamborn, E
    PLANT BIOSYSTEMS, 2005, 139 (03): : 279 - 294
  • [3] Influence of plant domestication on plant-pollinator interactions: Floral attributes and floral visitor communities in wild and cultivated squash plants
    Glasser, Sonja K.
    de Santiago-Hernandez, Martin Hesajim
    Delgado-Carrillo, Oliverio
    Espino, Luis Alberto Villanueva
    Perez, Adonaji Cortes
    Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Antonio
    Lira-Saade, Rafael
    Quesada, Mauricio
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2023, 110 (05)
  • [4] Patterns of introduced species interactions affect multiple aspects of network structure in plant-pollinator communities
    Russo, Laura
    Memmott, Jane
    Montoya, Daniel
    Shea, Katriona
    Buckley, Yvonne M.
    ECOLOGY, 2014, 95 (10) : 2953 - 2963
  • [5] Plant traits related to competition: how do they shape the functional diversity of communities?
    Navas, M. -L.
    Violle, C.
    COMMUNITY ECOLOGY, 2009, 10 (01) : 131 - 137
  • [6] Plant traits related to competition: how do they shape the functional diversity of communities?
    M. L. Navas
    C. Violle
    Community Ecology, 2009, 10 : 131 - 137
  • [7] How do patch burnings affect ant communities and seed removal in a subtropical grassland?
    Barbosa, Gabriel Goncalves
    Ferrando, Claire Pauline Ropke
    Mendonca Jr, Milton de Souza
    Podgaiski, Luciana Regina
    PERSPECTIVES IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2022, 20 (04) : 322 - 329
  • [8] How do plant communities respond to an erupting bison Bison bison athabascae population?
    Larter, Nicholas C.
    WILDLIFE BIOLOGY, 1997, 3 (02) : 107 - 116
  • [9] Do similar communities develop in similar sites? A test with zooplankton structure and function
    Jenkins, DG
    Buikema, AL
    ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 1998, 68 (03) : 421 - 443
  • [10] How do rotifer communities respond to floating photovoltaic systems in the subsidence wetlands created by underground coal mining in China?
    Li W.
    Wang Y.
    Wang G.
    Liang Y.
    Li C.
    Svenning J.-C.
    Journal of Environmental Management, 2023, 339