Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales

Understanding the limitations to persistence and formation of populations is critical to the conservation of rare species. Engaging in specialized ecological interactions may constrain a species' distribution and abundance through limiting the availability of suitable habitat or reducing fecund...

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Main Authors: Philips, R., Peakall, R., Hutchinson, M., Linde, C., Xu, T., Dixon, Kingsley, Hopper, S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3044
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author Philips, R.
Peakall, R.
Hutchinson, M.
Linde, C.
Xu, T.
Dixon, Kingsley
Hopper, S.
author_facet Philips, R.
Peakall, R.
Hutchinson, M.
Linde, C.
Xu, T.
Dixon, Kingsley
Hopper, S.
author_sort Philips, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Understanding the limitations to persistence and formation of populations is critical to the conservation of rare species. Engaging in specialized ecological interactions may constrain a species' distribution and abundance through limiting the availability of suitable habitat or reducing fecundity. In a generic-wide study of Drakaea (Orchidaceae), containing three common and six rare species, we tested if mycorrhizal specificity and pollinator availability is associated with intrinsic rarity across multiple spatial scales and if the ecology of common and rare species consistently differs. All Drakaea formed a mycorrhizal association with the same widely distributed species of Tulasnella, demonstrating that rarity does not arise from the mycorrhizal interaction. Drakaea are pollinated by sexual deception of thynnine wasps. Experiments at >300 sites across the geographic range of the genus revealed extreme pollinator specialization, with each species primarily pollinated by a single orchid-specific wasp species. In only two of the six rare species was the pollinator detected beyond the range of the orchid. At the scale of habitat patches, the pollinator of rare orchids occurred in fewer patches of otherwise suitable orchid habitat. Pollination rate was not significantly different between common and rare species. However, pollination rate was highest in small populations suggesting that pollinator-mediated rarity is likely to arise through patchy distribution of pollinators rather than infrequent pollen transfer in small populations. In five of the six rare species there was evidence that a specialized pollination system is contributing to rarity, demonstrating that conservation programs must prioritize the ecological requirements of pollinators.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-30442017-09-13T14:33:02Z Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales Philips, R. Peakall, R. Hutchinson, M. Linde, C. Xu, T. Dixon, Kingsley Hopper, S. Understanding the limitations to persistence and formation of populations is critical to the conservation of rare species. Engaging in specialized ecological interactions may constrain a species' distribution and abundance through limiting the availability of suitable habitat or reducing fecundity. In a generic-wide study of Drakaea (Orchidaceae), containing three common and six rare species, we tested if mycorrhizal specificity and pollinator availability is associated with intrinsic rarity across multiple spatial scales and if the ecology of common and rare species consistently differs. All Drakaea formed a mycorrhizal association with the same widely distributed species of Tulasnella, demonstrating that rarity does not arise from the mycorrhizal interaction. Drakaea are pollinated by sexual deception of thynnine wasps. Experiments at >300 sites across the geographic range of the genus revealed extreme pollinator specialization, with each species primarily pollinated by a single orchid-specific wasp species. In only two of the six rare species was the pollinator detected beyond the range of the orchid. At the scale of habitat patches, the pollinator of rare orchids occurred in fewer patches of otherwise suitable orchid habitat. Pollination rate was not significantly different between common and rare species. However, pollination rate was highest in small populations suggesting that pollinator-mediated rarity is likely to arise through patchy distribution of pollinators rather than infrequent pollen transfer in small populations. In five of the six rare species there was evidence that a specialized pollination system is contributing to rarity, demonstrating that conservation programs must prioritize the ecological requirements of pollinators. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3044 10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.027 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Philips, R.
Peakall, R.
Hutchinson, M.
Linde, C.
Xu, T.
Dixon, Kingsley
Hopper, S.
Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title_full Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title_fullStr Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title_full_unstemmed Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title_short Specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: The role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
title_sort specialized ecological interactions and plant species rarity: the role of pollinators and mycorrhizal fungi across multiple spatial scales
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3044