Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle

Most research on pollination has focussed on a subset of insect taxa within a narrow time window during daylight hours. As a consequence, we have a limited understanding of the diversity and activity of flower visitors during the night or belonging to taxa other than bees or syrphid flies. Here, we...

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Main Authors: Knop, E., Gerpe, C., Ryser, R., Hofmann, F., Menz, Myles, Trösch, S., Ursenbacher, S., Zoller, L., Fontaine, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60266
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author Knop, E.
Gerpe, C.
Ryser, R.
Hofmann, F.
Menz, Myles
Trösch, S.
Ursenbacher, S.
Zoller, L.
Fontaine, C.
author_facet Knop, E.
Gerpe, C.
Ryser, R.
Hofmann, F.
Menz, Myles
Trösch, S.
Ursenbacher, S.
Zoller, L.
Fontaine, C.
author_sort Knop, E.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Most research on pollination has focussed on a subset of insect taxa within a narrow time window during daylight hours. As a consequence, we have a limited understanding of the diversity and activity of flower visitors during the night or belonging to taxa other than bees or syrphid flies. Here, we quantified the abundance and species richness of flower visitors in ruderal meadows over repeated 24-h cycles (i.e. day and night), and identified abiotic factors influencing these patterns. From the plant perspective, we investigated the likelihood of being visited by an insect across a 24-h cycle. Activity of flower-visiting insects never dropped to zero over 24-h. During the day, non-syrphid Diptera and Hymenoptera were the most abundant, and species-rich groups of flower visitors, Lepidoptera and Coleoptera during night. While two of the seven most frequently visited plant species were most likely to be visited during the day, five also had a high likelihood to be visited during the night. The abundance and species richness of flower visitors was positively related to temperature during both the day and the night, whereas there was only a positive relationship with brightness during the day. We conclude that non-syrphid Diptera and nocturnal flower visitors are currently underappreciated. As the latter seem to respond differently to abiotic factors compared to diurnal species, they may potentially increase response diversity and resilience of plant-pollinator communities. There is an urgent need to improve our understanding of their ecological role and potential decline due to global change.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-602662018-06-14T00:38:39Z Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle Knop, E. Gerpe, C. Ryser, R. Hofmann, F. Menz, Myles Trösch, S. Ursenbacher, S. Zoller, L. Fontaine, C. Most research on pollination has focussed on a subset of insect taxa within a narrow time window during daylight hours. As a consequence, we have a limited understanding of the diversity and activity of flower visitors during the night or belonging to taxa other than bees or syrphid flies. Here, we quantified the abundance and species richness of flower visitors in ruderal meadows over repeated 24-h cycles (i.e. day and night), and identified abiotic factors influencing these patterns. From the plant perspective, we investigated the likelihood of being visited by an insect across a 24-h cycle. Activity of flower-visiting insects never dropped to zero over 24-h. During the day, non-syrphid Diptera and Hymenoptera were the most abundant, and species-rich groups of flower visitors, Lepidoptera and Coleoptera during night. While two of the seven most frequently visited plant species were most likely to be visited during the day, five also had a high likelihood to be visited during the night. The abundance and species richness of flower visitors was positively related to temperature during both the day and the night, whereas there was only a positive relationship with brightness during the day. We conclude that non-syrphid Diptera and nocturnal flower visitors are currently underappreciated. As the latter seem to respond differently to abiotic factors compared to diurnal species, they may potentially increase response diversity and resilience of plant-pollinator communities. There is an urgent need to improve our understanding of their ecological role and potential decline due to global change. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60266 10.1111/icad.12277 restricted
spellingShingle Knop, E.
Gerpe, C.
Ryser, R.
Hofmann, F.
Menz, Myles
Trösch, S.
Ursenbacher, S.
Zoller, L.
Fontaine, C.
Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title_full Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title_fullStr Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title_full_unstemmed Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title_short Rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
title_sort rush hours in flower visitors over a day-night cycle
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60266