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Does the likelihood of an A llee effect on plant fecundity depend on the type of pollinator?
Author(s) -
Duffy Karl J.,
Patrick Kirsten L.,
Johnson Steven D.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.452
H-Index - 181
eISSN - 1365-2745
pISSN - 0022-0477
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2745.12104
Subject(s) - pollinator , fecundity , biology , allee effect , pollination , ecology , population , abundance (ecology) , perennial plant , pollen , demography , sociology
Summary Factors underlying the A llee effect are still heavily debated in ecology. For plants that rely on pollinators for seed production, decreases in conspecific aggregation may reduce attractiveness to floral visitors and lead to an A llee effect. However, floral visitors often differ in their pollination effectiveness; hence, the likelihood of an A llee effect in plant fecundity may depend on how various flower visitors respond to plant aggregation. We tested for Allee effects on fecundity of individuals across two years in the self‐incompatible perennial, K niphofia linearifolia Baker ( X anthorrhoeaceae), which has two distinct types of pollinator, birds and native bees. For this, we used three measures of aggregation; population size, density and isolation. We made replicated pollinator observations in populations of various aggregations and quantified fecundity in these populations. To determine the differences in pollinator effectiveness and assess their contribution to fecundity, we selectively excluded bird visitors from K . linearifolia in these populations. We found that population size, but not density or isolation distance, was associated with increased bird abundance and seed set in one of the two years of the study. Bird visitation rate increased with increased plant aggregation within populations. Fruit set and seed set per flower were positively related to bird visitation rate. The difference in seed set per flower between bird‐excluded and unmanipulated plants increased with increasing population size. Although birds were much less frequent visitors than bees (on average 2.1 visits plant −1  h −1 compared to 57.5 visits plant ‐1  h −1 ), selective exclusion experiments indicated that birds are consistently the more effective pollinators of this species, and therefore most likely to influence fecundity. Synthesis . In this system, characterised by an A llee effect on plant fecundity, birds were the most effective pollinators, responded positively to plant aggregation and were associated with increased fecundity. Therefore, the responses of effective pollinators to plant aggregation may be a factor that underlies A llee effects on plant fecundity.

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