nectar robbery
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2021 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia Smith ◽  
Adriana Rendón ◽  
Rodrigo Barahona ◽  
Wladimir Moya

One of the main visitors to Fabia bean crops (Vicia faba) in South America is the invasive bumblebee species Bombus terrestris. This is particularly true in Chile, where B. terrestris was first introduced in 1997 and is now common over much of the country. In this study, we evaluated the activity of the principal pollinators of V. faba over two cropping seasons by assessing their visitation rates while distinguishing between legitimate visits, likely to lead to pollination, and nectar robbery. We then determined the net contribution of insect visitation on pod and seed set. We recorded seven species of floral visitors. Most visits (legitimate visits and robbery) were from the honeybee (Apis mellifera), with B. terrestris being the next most common visitor. In the case of B. terrestris, 87.19% of visits were nectar robbery. On average, the same flower perforation was visited 23 times by B. terrestris during the flower's lifespan. In general, the frequency of legitimate visits varied with pollinator identity and year. For B. terrestris, each flower received an average of 0.95 legitimate visits during its entire lifespan. The time spent by B. terrestris visiting flowers for both nectar robbery or pollen collection decreased after the first day of flowering suggesting resource depletion. The number of pods, total seed number, and seed weight were lower where self rather than open pollination. This suggests that open pollination increased reproductive success. We conclude that B. terrestris was likely to contribute relatively little to pollination while at the same time depleting floral resources throughout the flowers’ lifespan.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Júlia Mendonça Almeida ◽  
Caio César Corrêa Missagia ◽  
Maria Alice Santos Alves

Abstract Many plants pollinated by nectar-foraging animals have to maintain a balance between legitimate visitor attraction strategies and mechanisms that minimize illegitimate visits. This study investigated how floral display and neighboring species composition influences nectar robbing in the tropical ornithophilous herb Heliconia spathocircinata. We tested the role of inflorescence display, flower abundance, and neighboring species in the reduction of nectar robbing in H. spathocircinata. Our results indicate that nectar robbing hummingbird activity was higher in moderately large inflorescence displays and that the frequency of nectar robbing in H. spathocircinata decreases with increased flower abundance and the presence of neighboring plant species. Neighboring non-ornithophilous plants decreased the frequency of nectar robbing in H. spathocircinata flowers to a greater extent than ornithophilous ones. These results suggest that nectar robbing hummingbirds are attracted to similar conditions that attract legitimate visitors, and that spatial aggregation and mixed-species displays may represent a mechanism to dilute nectar robbing effects at an individual level.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon Fitch ◽  
John Vandermeer

AbstractThe frequency and outcome of biotic interactions commonly vary with environmental conditions, even absent changes to community composition. Yet the drivers of such environmentally-mediated change in biotic interactions are poorly understood, limiting our ability to predict how environmental change will impact communities. Studying nectar robbery by stingless bees of Odontonema cuspidatum (Acanthaceae) in a coffee agroecosystem, we documented a temporally consistent difference in nectar robbing intensity between anthropogenic and seminatural habitats. Plants growing in coffee fields (anthropogenic habitat) experienced significantly more nectar robbery than plants growing in forest fragments (seminatural habitat). Using a combination of field surveys and manipulative experiments, we found that nectar robbery significantly reduces fruit set in O. cuspidatum, and that the difference in nectar robbing intensity between habitats is due primarily to changes in robber behavior. Nectar robbers robbed plants in coffee more because of differences both in focal plant traits and floral community composition. Nectar robber density was higher in coffee fields, but changes in abundance had a weak effect on nectar robbery. These results suggest that trait changes stemming from environmental change may often drive changes in biotic interactions, despite being less well-studied than the effects of environmental change on organism density.


2015 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 1000-1013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Fox ◽  
Kirk M. Anderson ◽  
Rebecca Andres ◽  
Meredith C. Foster ◽  
Celia E. Foster ◽  
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Oecologia ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 178 (3) ◽  
pp. 783-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pietro Kiyoshi Maruyama ◽  
Jeferson Vizentin-Bugoni ◽  
Bo Dalsgaard ◽  
Ivan Sazima ◽  
Marlies Sazima

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