2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11829-013-9246-3
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The most effective pollinator revisited: pollen dynamics in a spring-flowering herb

Abstract: Most flowers are visited by a wide range of potential pollinators. However, their efficiency in pollen removal and deposition, and other behavioural factors affecting pollination effectiveness may greatly differ among taxa, and even individuals. Fritillary (Fritillaria meleagris L., Liliaceae) is a spring-flowering, critically endangered plant in the Polish flora, red-listed in most of the European countries of its range. Based on indirect evidence, that is, body pollen loads, visitation frequency and seasonal… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

1
33
0

Year Published

2013
2013
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

4
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 42 publications
(36 citation statements)
references
References 58 publications
1
33
0
Order By: Relevance
“…This shows that the hypothesis proposed by some researchers (Gómez and Zamora 1992;Morris 2003;Vázquez et al 2005), namely, that visit rate is a good surrogate of pollinator performance, should be treated with caution, as it is true only for some plant species (see e.g. Motten et al 1981;Fishbein and Venable 1996;Olsen 1997;Sahli and Conner 2007;Niemirski and Zych 2011;Zych and Stpiczyńska 2012;Zych et al 2013), and thus may be misleading in others (e.g. Zych 2002Zych , 2007Fumero-Cabán and Watts et al 2012; and the present study).…”
Section: Pollination Importancementioning
confidence: 45%
“…This shows that the hypothesis proposed by some researchers (Gómez and Zamora 1992;Morris 2003;Vázquez et al 2005), namely, that visit rate is a good surrogate of pollinator performance, should be treated with caution, as it is true only for some plant species (see e.g. Motten et al 1981;Fishbein and Venable 1996;Olsen 1997;Sahli and Conner 2007;Niemirski and Zych 2011;Zych and Stpiczyńska 2012;Zych et al 2013), and thus may be misleading in others (e.g. Zych 2002Zych , 2007Fumero-Cabán and Watts et al 2012; and the present study).…”
Section: Pollination Importancementioning
confidence: 45%
“…In our systems, the proportion of taxa that carried no pollen whatsoever was relatively small, 4 and 13 %, respectively, for Ochota and Kabaty, but this number may be higher for other ecosystems (Forup and Memmott 2005;Alarcon 2010). Body pollen loads are one of the necessary prerequisites of pollination (Johnson and Steiner 2000;Pellmyr 2002), but they still do not provide much information on the real importance of visitor taxa (see e.g., Zych et al 2013) and hence do not offer the ultimate solution to our efforts of studying real pollination networks, as opposed to flower-visitor networks. Pollen transport networks seem, however, an important step towards better understanding the complex relationships that exist between plants and their pollinators on an ecosystemic scale (Popic et al 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ants were earlier recorded as floral visitors in flowers of V. myrtillus [25] and C. vulgaris [7], but treated as nectar thieves rather than efficient pollinators. In both studies, however, no measure of insect effectiveness (see, e.g., [38] for details) was applied. Ants are an important element of boreal forest ecosystems [39], and despite their low efficiency in flowers, some authors suggest that potentially they could be important in pollination of species with easily accessible flowers producing little nectar and occurring in high local densities [40], a characteristic fitting many forest Ericaceae.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%