首页> 外文期刊>Oikos: A Journal of Ecology >Plant connectivity underlies plant-pollinator-exploiter distributions in Ficus petiolaris and associated pollinating and non-pollinating fig wasps
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Plant connectivity underlies plant-pollinator-exploiter distributions in Ficus petiolaris and associated pollinating and non-pollinating fig wasps

机译:植物的连通性是无花果榕和相关授粉和非授粉无花果黄蜂中植物-传粉者-资源利用者分布的基础

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Mutualism is ubiquitous in nature, and nursery pollination mutualisms provide a system well suited to quantifying the benefits and costs of symbiotic interactions. In nursery pollination mutualisms, pollinators reproduce within the inflorescence they pollinate, with benefits and costs being measured in the numbers of pollinator offspring and seeds produced. This type of mutualism is also typically exploited by seed-consuming non-pollinators that obtain resources from plants without providing pollination services. Theory predicts that the rate at which pollen-bearing foundresses' visit a plant will strongly affect the plant's production of pollinator offspring, non-pollinator offspring, and seeds. Spatially aggregated plants are predicted to have high rates of foundress visitation, increasing pollinator and seed production, and decreasing non-pollinator production; very high foundress visitation may also decrease seed production indirectly through the production of pollinators. Working with a nursery mutualism comprised of the Sonoran Desert rock fig, Ficus petiolaris, and host-specific pollinating and non-pollinating fig wasps, we use linear models to evaluate four hypotheses linking species interactions to benefits and costs: 1) foundress density increases with host-tree connectivity, 2) pollinator production increases with foundress density, and 3) non-pollinator production and 4) seed production decrease with pollinator production. We also directly test how tree connectivity affects non-pollinator production. We find strong support for our four hypotheses, and we conclude that tree connectivity is a key driver of foundress visitation, thereby strongly affecting spatial distributions in the F. petiolaris community. We also find that foundress visitation decreases at the northernmost edge of the F. petiolaris range. Finally, we find species-specific effects of tree connectivity on non-pollinators to be strongly correlated with previously estimated non-pollinator dispersal abilities. We conclude that plant connectivity is highly important for predicting plant-pollinator-exploiter dynamics, and discuss the implications of our results for species coexistence and adaptation.
机译:互惠关系在自然界无处不在,苗圃授粉的互惠关系提供了一个非常适合量化共生相互作用的收益和成本的系统。在苗圃授粉共生中,授粉媒介在授粉的花序中繁殖,其收益和成本以授粉媒介的后代和种子的数量来衡量。消耗种子的非授粉者通常也利用这种类型的互惠关系,这些授粉者从植物中获取资源而没有提供授粉服务。理论预测,带有花粉的花粉生女拜访植物的速度将强烈影响植物的授粉后代,非授粉后代和种子的生产。预计空间聚集的植物有较高的基层造访率,增加了传粉媒介和种子的产量,减少了非传粉媒介的产量;很高的基层探视者可能还会通过授粉媒介的生产间接减少种子的生产。我们与由Sonoran Desert岩石无花果,无花果榕,宿主特定的授粉和非授粉无花果黄蜂组成的苗圃共生一起工作,我们使用线性模型来评估将物种相互作用与收益和成本联系起来的四个假设:1)随着宿主-树的连通性,2)授粉者的产量随地基密度的增加而增加,3)非授粉者的产量,以及4)随传粉者的产量而降低的种子产量。我们还直接测试树的连通性如何影响非授粉者的生产。我们为这四个假设提供了有力的支持,并且得出结论,树木的连通性是奠基者拜访的关键驱动力,从而极大地影响了F. petiolaris群落的空间分布。我们还发现在F. petiolaris范围的最北端,来访者人数减少。最后,我们发现树的连通性对非授粉媒介的物种特异性影响与先前估计的非授粉媒介分散能力密切相关。我们得出结论,植物连通性对于预测植物-授粉-探索者动态非常重要,并讨论了我们的结果对物种共存和适应的影响。

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