4.7 Article

Non-native plants and illegitimate interactions are highly relevant for supporting hummingbird pollinators in the urban environment

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URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
卷 86, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ufug.2023.128025

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Exotic plants; Interaction networks; Nectar robbing; Nectar theft; Phenology; Pollinator conservation

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Urbanization leads to restructuring of plant-animal interactions and increased introduction of non-native species. Conservation of pollinators in urban areas is important. This study characterized the interaction network between hummingbirds and plants in an urban green area in Brazil, finding that a majority of interactions were illegitimate and the network was generalized. Non-native plants contributed more to nectar availability, especially during periods of resource shortage. Non-native species play a relevant role in maintaining urban pollinators and biodiversity-friendly urban planning should consider their contributions.
Urbanization leads to the restructuring of plant-animal interactions due to environmental changes and introduction of non-native species that become part of local ecological processes. The conservation of pollinators in urban areas has received increasing attention. However, detailed quantification of available floral resources and their use by pollinators are rarely conducted. Here, we characterized the interaction network between hummingbirds and native and non-native plants, the behavior of resource use by pollinators and the temporal availability of nectar resources in an extensive urban green area from Brazil. We found that more than half of the interactions between hummingbirds and plants were illegitimate, which do not constitute potential pollination. The interaction network was generalized, indicating low level of niche partitioning, which is usual for urban environments. Inclusion of non-pollination interactions increased specialization. Although native and non-native plants provide a similar amount of nectar when considering each plant species for a given month, the latter contributed most to the total nectar availability owed to their higher abundance and longer flowering phenologies. Importantly, non-native plants provided resources when native flowers were scarce. Our results show how non-native plants may sometimes have relevant contributions for maintenance of pollinators in cities throughout the year, supporting them during periods of resource shortage. At the same time, urban pollinator-plant communities may be characterized by high prevalence of illegitimate interactions, which highlights the opportunistic use of resources by animals. In conclusion, our study suggests that biodiversity-friendly urban planning should consider the relevant role played by non-native species and that pollinator support may require different types of interactions with flowers.

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