Testing non-additive effects of nectar-robbing ants and hummingbird pollination on the reproductive success of a parasitic plant
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Caballero, Paula
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Testing non-additive effects of nectar-robbing ants and hummingbird pollination on the reproductive success of a parasitic plant
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Abstract
Nectar robbing may have an indirect
negative effect on plant reproduction by discouraging
legitimate pollinator species from visiting robbed
flowers. In this study, we set up a 2 9 2 factorial
design with nectar-robbing ants and hummingbird
pollination to test for non-additive effects on fruit set,
seed mass, and seed germination of the leafless
mistletoe Tristerix aphyllus (Loranthaceae). Even
though ants caused conspicuous damage at the base
of the floral tubes, nectar availability was reduced by
only 8 % in the presence of ants. The green-backed
firecrown Sephanoides sephaniodes was insensitive to
the presence of ants. Rather, the bird responded to
flower number and the presence or the absence of
damage, but not to the extent of damage within
inflorescences. As hummingbirds were largely insensitive
to variation in nectar robbing, the interaction
ant 9 hummingbird had no effect on plant-reproductive
success. Thus, the factorial experiment did not
provide evidence for indirect negative effects of nectar
robbing on plant reproduction. These results suggest
that indirect effects of nectar robbers on pollinator
behaviour may occur under a more restricted set of
conditions than those previously considered. We
suggest that the low amount of nectar removed by
nectar-robbing ants was insufficient for hummingbirds
to avoid robbed flowers, which restricted the potential
for non-additive effects.
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Plant Ecol (2013) 214:633–640
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