Spatiotemporal variation in the role of floral traits in shaping tropical plant-pollinator interactions.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_2E50C1B6910D
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Spatiotemporal variation in the role of floral traits in shaping tropical plant-pollinator interactions.
Journal
Ecology letters
Author(s)
Klomberg Y., Tropek R., Mertens JEJ, Kobe I.N., Hodeček J., Raška J., Fominka N.T., Souto-Vilarós D., Janečková P., Janeček Š.
ISSN
1461-0248 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1461-023X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
04/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Editor
Mayfield M.
Volume
25
Number
4
Pages
839-850
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Letter
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The pollination syndrome hypothesis predicts that plants pollinated by the same pollinator group bear convergent combinations of specific floral functional traits. Nevertheless, some studies have shown that these combinations predict pollinators with relatively low accuracy. This discrepancy may be caused by changes in the importance of specific floral traits for different pollinator groups and under different environmental conditions. To explore this, we studied pollination systems and floral traits along an elevational gradient on Mount Cameroon during wet and dry seasons. Using Random Forest (Machine Learning) models, allowing the ranking of traits by their relative importance, we demonstrated that some floral traits are more important than others for pollinators. However, the distribution and importance of traits vary under different environmental conditions. Our results imply the need to improve our trait-based understanding of plant-pollinator interactions to better inform the debate surrounding the pollination syndrome hypothesis.
Keywords
Flowers, Phenotype, Plants, Pollination, Seasons, Afrotropics, Mount Cameroon National Park, foraging behaviour, pollination syndrome, pollination systems, pollinator predictability
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
11/01/2022 15:10
Last modification date
23/12/2023 8:05
Usage data