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Spatiotemporal Variations in Seed Set and Pollen Limitation in Populations of the Rare Generalist Species Polemonium caeruleum in Poland

Autor
Skłodowski, Mateusz
Ryniewicz, Justyna
Roguz, Katarzyna
Zych, Marcin
Jermakowicz, Edyta
Tałałaj, Izabela
Ostrowiecka, Beata
Wróblewska, Ada
Brzosko, Emilia
Mirski, Paweł
Data publikacji
2022
Abstrakt (EN)

A vast majority of angiosperms are pollinated by animals, and a decline in the number and diversity of insects often affects plant reproduction through pollen limitation. This phenomenon may be particularly severe in rare plant species, whose populations are shrinking. Here, we examined the variability in factors shaping reproductive success and pollen limitation in red-listed Polemonium caeruleum L. During a 5-year study in several populations of P. caeruleum (7–15, depending on year), we assessed the degree of pollen limitation based on differences in seed set between open-pollinated (control) and handpollinated flowers. We analysed the effects of flower visitors, population size, and meteorological data on plant reproductive success and pollen limitation. Our study showed that pollen limitation rarely affected P. caeruleum populations, and was present mainly in small populations. Pollen limitation index was negatively affected by the size of population, visitation frequency of all insects, and when considering the visitation frequency of individual groups, also by honeybee visits. Seed production in control treatment was positively influenced by the population size, average monthly precipitation in June and visits of hoverflies, while visits of honeybees, average monthly temperature in September, and average monthly precipitation in August influenced seed production negatively. As generalist plant P. caeruleum can be pollinated by diverse insect groups, however, in small populations their main visitors, the honeybees and bumblebees, may be less attracted, eventually leading to the disappearance of these populations. In pollination of P. caeruleum managed honeybees may play a dual role: while they are the most frequent and efficient flower visitors, their presence decreases seed set in open-pollinated flowers, which is most probably related to efficient pollen collection by these insects.

Słowa kluczowe EN
Apis mellifera
plant-pollinator interactions
pollen limitation
pollinator composition
reproductive ecology
seed set
spatiotemporal variation
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki biologiczne
Czasopismo
Frontiers in Plant Science
Tom
12
Strony od-do
1-14
ISSN
1664-462X
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2022-01-03
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa