Bumble bee behavior and selection on flower size in the sky pilot, Polemonium viscosum
- 1 November 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 74 (1) , 20-23
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00377340
Abstract
In alpine Polemonium viscosum, plants having sweet-scented flowers are primarily pollinated by queens of the bumble bee species, Bombus kirbyellus. In this paper we ask whether two aspects of the pollination effectiveness of bumble bees, visitation rate and pollination efficiency, vary significantly with flower size in sweet-flowered P. viscosum. (i) Bumble bees visited plants with large flowers on 80–90% of encounters, but visited those with smaller flowers on only 49% of encounters. (ii) However, the gain in pollination that large-flowered plants obtained via increased visitation was countered in part because bumble bees deposited fewer outcross pollen grains per visit on stigmas of large flowers than on those of small ones. When both visitation rate and pollination efficiency are taken into account, the predicted value of a single bumble bee encounter declines from 1.06 seeds for flowers larger than 18 mm in diameter to 0.55 seeds for flowers smaller than 12 mm in diameter. Our results suggest that bumble bee pollinators of P. viscosum prefer flower morphologies that are poorly suited for precise pollination. Such behavioral complexities are likely to place constraints on the evolution of “optimal” floral design.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pollen Deposition and Removal by Bees Visiting Two Tree Species in PanamaBiotropica, 1987
- Floral Evolution: Attractiveness to Pollinators Increases Male FitnessScience, 1986
- Regulation of Seed‐Set in Polemonium viscosum: Floral Scents, Pollination, and ResourcesEcology, 1985
- The effects of nectar level and flower development on pollen carry-over in inflorescences of fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) (Onagraceae)Canadian Journal of Botany, 1985
- Bumblebee foraging and floral scent dimorphism: Bombus kirbyellus Curtis (Hymenoptera: Apidae) and Polemonium viscosum Nutt. (Polemoniaceae)Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1983
- Rates of cross-pollination inLycopersicon pimpinellifolium: Impact of genetic variation in floral charactersÖsterreichische botanische Zeitschrift, 1978
- Measuring the relative importance of different pollinators to plantsNature, 1975
- Low Frequency Disadvantage in the Exploitation of Pollinators by Corolla Variants in PhloxThe American Naturalist, 1972
- CO‐EVOLUTION OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS — SYSTEMATIC INSIGHTS FROM PLANT‐INSECT INTERACTIONSTaxon, 1971
- Adaptive Radiation of Reproductive Characteristics in Angiosperms, I: Pollination MechanismsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1970