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The impact of a native dominant plant, Euphorbia jolkin i i , on plant–flower visitor networks and pollen deposition on stigmas of co‐flowering species in subalpine meadows of Shangri‐La, SW China
Author(s) -
Zhao YanHui,
Memmott Jane,
Vaughan Ian P.,
Li HaiDong,
Ren ZongXin,
Lázaro Amparo,
Zhou Wei,
Xu Xin,
Wang WeiJia,
Liang Huan,
Li DeZhu,
Wang Hong
Publication year - 2021
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 - 10.1111/1365-2745.13624
Subject(s) - biology , euphorbia , botany , species richness , plant community , species evenness , pollinator , dominance (genetics) , native plant , pollen , pollination , introduced species , ecology , biochemistry , gene
Anthropogenic activity can modify the distribution of species abundance in a community leading to the appearance of new dominant species. While many studies report that an alien plant species which becomes increasingly dominant can change species composition, plant–pollinator network structure and the reproductive output of native plant species, much less is known about native plant species which become dominant in their communities. Euphorbia jolkinii Boissier ( Euphorbia, hereafter) has become a dominant native plant in the over‐grazed meadows of Shangri‐La, SW China. During the flowering season of Euphorbia and over 2 years, we quantified the impact of Euphorbia on plant richness and flower visitor richness in 12 subalpine meadows along a gradient of Euphorbia dominance. We also evaluated the floral preferences of flower visitors, interaction evenness of plant–flower visitor networks and the deposition of pollen on the stigmas of two co‐flowering plant species ( Gentiana chungtienensis and Anemone rupestris ) in each meadow. The species richness of flower visitors to non‐ Euphorbia plants was negatively correlated with Euphorbia dominance. As the proportion of Euphorbia increases, flower visitors to Euphorbia decreased, while flower visitors to other co‐flowering plants increased. Interaction evenness decreased as the proportion of Euphorbia increased. Furthermore, the conspecific pollen deposition of one of the two co‐flowering plant species studied, G. chungtienensis , decreased as the proportion of Euphorbia increased. Synthesis . There appears to be little substantive difference between the impact of a newly dominant native plant and the impacts reported for many alien plants on native plant–pollinator communities. This lack of difference suggests that dominance, in addition to plant origin (alien vs. native), could play an important role in influencing the structure and functioning of native communities. This finding has considerable implications for restoration ecology. Thus, communities where natural dominance order has been changed due to anthropogenic activity may not be considered a problem as all the species are native—in reality though, they may be as damaged as communities invaded by alien species.