1990
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.es.21.110190.002151
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Plant-Pollinator Interactions in Tropical Rain Forests

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Cited by 689 publications
(384 citation statements)
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“…Most bromeliad species present ornithophily syndrome, whereas some others show entomophily or chiropterophily (Sazima et al, 1989;Benzing, 2000;Rios et al, 2010). Hummingbirds are considered the most important bromeliad pollinators (Bawa, 1990;Nara and Weber, 2002;Canela and Sazima, 2003;Santana and Machado, 2010;Christianini et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most bromeliad species present ornithophily syndrome, whereas some others show entomophily or chiropterophily (Sazima et al, 1989;Benzing, 2000;Rios et al, 2010). Hummingbirds are considered the most important bromeliad pollinators (Bawa, 1990;Nara and Weber, 2002;Canela and Sazima, 2003;Santana and Machado, 2010;Christianini et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used hummingbird-mediated pollination as a model system, as hummingbirds may be powerful agents for connecting fragmented plant populations, given their extensive daily foraging distances of up to 1300 m in our study region [25]. Between 18% and 34% of neotropical understory flowering plants show adaptations for hummingbird pollination [26,27]; however, the species richness of hummingbird pollinated flowers may be reduced in highly disturbed landscapes [11]. Further, forest gaps appear to limit hummingbird movement [28], resulting in pollen limitation of the understory herb Heliconia tortuosa, the most common and highly linked floral resource in the regional hummingbird-plant pollination network [24,29,30].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This dependence on nectar as a food makes hummingbirds the major group of vertebrate pollinators in the Neotropics (Bawa, 1990). Flowers adapted to hummingbird-pollination (ornithophilous) are an important component of neotropical plant communities, comprising 2-15% of angiosperm species in a given community (Feinsinger, 1983;Machado and Lopes, 2004;Ramírez, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%