期刊
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 109, 期 12, 页码 1969-1980出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.16080
关键词
Campsis radicans; Gelsemium sempervirens; heterospecific pollen; Oenothera fruticosa; pollen limitation; pollen receipt; pollination; urban
资金
- National Science Foundation [DEB-0743535]
- Dartmouth College (R. Melville Cramer Fund)
This study investigates the impact of urbanization on the pollination and reproduction of bee-pollinated plants. The results suggest that despite the presence of more pollinators in urban areas, there is still pollen limitation for native plant reproduction in urban landscapes.
Premise Evidence suggests that bees may benefit from moderate levels of human development. However, the effects of human development on pollination and reproduction of bee-pollinated plants are less-well understood. Studies have measured natural variation in pollination and plant reproduction as a function of urbanization, but few have experimentally measured the magnitude of pollen limitation in urban vs. non-urban sites. Doing so is important to unambiguously link changes in pollination to plant reproduction. Previous work in the Southeastern United States found that urban sites supported twice the abundance of bees compared to non-urban sites. We tested the hypothesis that greater bee abundance in some of the same urban sites translates into reduced pollen limitation compared to non-urban sites. Methods We manipulated pollination to three native, wild-growing, bee-pollinated plants: Gelsemium sempervirens, Oenothera fruticosa, and Campsis radicans. Using supplemental pollinations, we tested for pollen limitation of three components of female reproduction in paired urban and non-urban sites. We also measured pollen receipt as a proxy for pollinator visitation. Results We found that all three plant species were pollen-limited for some measures of female reproduction. However, opposite to our original hypothesis, two of the three species were more pollen-limited in urban relative to non-urban sites. We found that open-pollinated flowers in urban sites received less conspecific and more heterospecific pollen on average than those in non-urban sites. Conclusions These results suggest that even when urban sites have more abundant pollinators, this may not alleviate pollen limitation of native plant reproduction in urban landscapes.
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