Hesajim de Santiago‐Hernández, 2019.
miércoles, 31 de julio de 2019
The role of pollination effectiveness on the attributes of interaction networks: from floral visitation to plant fitness
Hesajim de Santiago‐Hernández, 2019.
Hesajim de Santiago‐Hernández, 2019.
Network analysis is a powerful tool to understand community‐level
plant‐pollinator interactions. We evaluate the role of floral visitors
on plant fitness through a series of pollination exclusion experiments
to test the effectiveness of pollinators of an Ipomoea community
in the Pacific coast of México, including: (1) all flower visitors, (2)
visitors that contact the reproductive organs, (3) visitors that deposit
pollen on stigmas, and (4) visitors that mediate fruit and seed
production. Our results show that networks built from effective
pollination interactions are smaller, less connected, more specialized
and modular than floral visitor networks. Modules are associated with
pollinator functional groups and they provide strong support for
pollination syndromes only when non‐effective interactions are excluded.
In contrast to other studies, the analyzed networks are not nested. Our
results also show that only 59% of floral visitors were legitimate
pollinators that contribute to seed production. Furthermore, only 27% of
the links in visitation network resulted in seed production. Our study
shows that plant‐pollination networks that consider effectiveness
measures of pollination in addition to floral visitation provide
insightful information about the different role floral visitors play in a
community, encompassing a large number of commensalistic/antagonistic
interactions and the more restricted set of mutualistic relationships
that underlie the evolution of convergent floral phenotypes in plants.
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