4.7 Article

Can floral traits predict an invasive plant's impact on native plant-pollinator communities?

期刊

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
卷 100, 期 5, 页码 1216-1223

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2012.02004.x

关键词

Acacia saligna; biological invasions; flower morphology; fynbos; generalist; honeybee; invasion ecology; plant-insect interactions; plant-plant interactions; pollination syndromes

资金

  1. DST-NRF Centre for Invasion Biology
  2. Department of Botany and Zoology at Stellenbosch University
  3. National Research Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The possession of certain floral traits can determine which insects visit a plant species. If two species possess similar floral traits that determine shared flower visitors, floral traits can be said to mediate plantplant interactions. Such indirect interactions are important for understanding fundamental relationships of plant communities, such as competition and facilitation but thus far have only been tested within a native community context. We test whether floral-trait similarity can be used to predict interactions between an invasive plant and co-occurring native species in South Africa's Cape Floristic Region. We surveyed flower visitation at invaded and uninvaded plots across four sites and correlated floral-trait similarity between invasive and native species with both invasion impact on native flower visitation and flower visitor overlap of natives and the invasive species. Similarity of all traits (categorical and continuous) and categorical traits alone explained invasion impact (flower visitor overlap) between the native and invasive species. The majority of flower visitor overlap was attributed to the native honeybee Apis mellifera subsp. capensis. This study is the first to show that floral traits can be used to predict novel plantplant interactions, even amongst ecologically generalized flower visitors and plants and to predict potential impacts of an invasive species on native flowering communities. However, floral traits were not useful for predicting changes in visitation to plant species. Synthesis. Results advance our understanding of the role of plant traits in ecological communities and reveal that they are important in mediating not only plantpollinator interactions but also plantplant interactions. Our findings also shed light on invasivenative plant interactions via pollinators and have the potential to predict certain invasion impacts.

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