Predicting the effects of nectar robbing on plant reproduction: implications of pollen limitation and plant mating system
Abstract
The outcome of species interactions is often difficult to predict, depending on the organisms involved and the ecological context. Nectar robbers remove nectar from flowers, often without providing pollination service, and their effects on plant reproduction vary in strength and direction. In two case studies and a meta‐analysis, we tested the importance of pollen limitation and plant mating system in predicting the impacts of nectar robbing on female plant reproduction. We predicted that nectar robbing would have the strongest effects on species requiring pollinators to set seed and pollen limited for seed production. Our predictions were partially supported. In the first study, natural nectar robbing was associated with lower seed production in Delphinium nuttallianum, a self‐compatible but non‐autogamously selfing, pollen‐limited perennial, and experimental nectar robbing reduced seed set relative to unrobbed plants. The second study involved Linaria vulgaris, a self‐incompatible perennial that is generally not pollen limited. Natural levels of nectar robbing generally had little effect on estimates of female reproduction in L. vulgaris, while experimental nectar robbing reduced seed set per fruit but not percentage of fruit set. A meta‐analysis revealed that nectar robbing had strong negative effects on pollen‐limited and self‐incompatible plants, as predicted. Our results suggest that pollination biology and plant mating system must be considered to understand and predict the ecological outcome of both mutualistic and antagonistic plant–animal interactions.
Local Knowledge Graph (18 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
The impact of floral larceny on individuals, populations, and communities
Impact of nectar robbing on estimates of pollen flow: conceptual predictions and emperical outcomes
Nectar robbing in Ipomopsis aggregata: does high nectar production confer tolerance?
Data from: Quantifying direct vs. indirect effects of nectar robbers on male and female components of plant fitness
Why are some plant—nectar robber interactions commensalisms?
Data from: Facilitated exploitation of pollination mutualisms: fitness consequences for plants
Shrubland Ecosystem Genetics And Biodiversity: Proceedings
Proceedings: Using Seeds of Native Species on Rangelands
Revegetation with Native Plant Species: proceedings, 1997 Society for Ecological Restoration Annual Meeting
Cited By (78 times, 10 in Knowledge Hub)
Unraveling the ecological and evolutionary impacts of a plant invader on the pollination of a native plant
Floral reward strategies, visitor behavior, and plant reproductive outcomes
Invasive plants and water availablity mediate outcomes of plant-pollinator interactions
Why are some plant-nectar robber interactions commensalisms?
Conditional Exploitation and Context-Dependent Fitness Consequences of Pollination Mutualisms
Quantifying direct vs. indirect effects of nectar robbers on male and female components of plant fitness
Norditerpene alkaloid concentrations in tissues and floral rewards of larkspurs and impacts on pollinators
Additive effects of herbivory, nectar robbing and seed predation on male and female fitness components of the host plant <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>
The effects of phenology on <i>Delphinium nuttallianum</i>
Density-dependent demographic responses of a semelparous plant to natural variation in seed rain
References (74)
13 in Knowledge Hub, 61 external
