About
Contact
Help
Sending publications
How to publish
Advanced Search
View Item 
  •   Home
  • Facultad de Ciencias
  • Artículos de revistas
  • View Item
  •   Home
  • Facultad de Ciencias
  • Artículos de revistas
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse byCommunities and CollectionsDateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionDateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

My Account

Login to my accountRegister
Biblioteca Digital - Universidad de Chile
Revistas Chilenas
Repositorios Latinoamericanos
Tesis LatinoAmericanas
Tesis chilenas
Related linksRegistry of Open Access RepositoriesOpenDOARGoogle scholarCOREBASE
My Account
Login to my accountRegister

Nonadditive effects of flower damage and hummingbird pollination on the fecundity of Mimulus luteus

Artículo
Thumbnail
Open/Download
IconPohl_Nelida.pdf (724.7Kb)
Publication date
2006-10
Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Pohl, Nélida
Cómo citar
Nonadditive effects of flower damage and hummingbird pollination on the fecundity of Mimulus luteus
.
Copiar
Cerrar

Author
  • Pohl, Nélida;
  • Carvallo, Gastón;
  • Botto Mahan, Carezza;
  • Medel Contreras, Rodrigo;
Abstract
Flower herbivory and pollination have been described as interactive processes that influence each other in their effects on plant reproductive success. Few studies, however, have so far examined their joint effects in natural populations. In this paper we evaluate the influence of flower damage and pollination by the hummingbird Oreotrochilus leucopleurus on the fecundity of the Andean monkey flower Mimulus luteus. We performed a 2x2 factorial experiment, with artificial clipping of lower petals and selective exclusion of the hummingbird as main factors. In spite of the relatively low proportion (27.5%) of the variance in seed production accounted for by the full factorial model, artificial damage and hummingbird exclusion, as well as their interaction, were highly significant, indicating nonadditive effects of factors on plant fecundity. In the presence of hummingbirds, undamaged flowers had a seed production that was 1.7-fold higher than for damaged flowers, suggesting that the effect of flower damage on female reproductive success occurs probably as a consequence of hummingbird discrimination against damaged corollas. This result indicates that the impact of flower herbivory on plant fecundity was contingent on the presence or absence of hummingbirds, suggesting that pollinators may indirectly select for undamaged and probably resistant flower phenotypes. A second interaction effect revealed that undamaged flowers produced 78.5% more seeds in the absence of rather than in the presence of O. leucopleurus, raising the question of the ecological mechanism involved. We suggest that the strong territorial behavior exhibited by the bee Centris nigerrima may confine the foraging activities of the remaining bee species to safe sites within exclosures. Overall, our results provide evidence that hummingbird pollination and flower herbivory have interdependent effects on M. luteus fecundity, which indicates that it will be difficult to predict their ecological and evolutionary consequences unless interactions are analyzed in an integrated form.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/118860
ISSN: 0029-8549
Quote Item
OECOLOGIA Volume: 149 Issue: 4 Pages: 648-655 Published: OCT 2006
Collections
  • Artículos de revistas
xmlui.footer.title
31 participating institutions
More than 73,000 publications
More than 110,000 topics
More than 75,000 authors
Published in the repository
  • How to publish
  • Definitions
  • Copyright
  • Frequent questions
Documents
  • Dating Guide
  • Thesis authorization
  • Document authorization
  • How to prepare a thesis (PDF)
Services
  • Digital library
  • Chilean academic journals portal
  • Latin American Repository Network
  • Latin American theses
  • Chilean theses
Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
Universidad de Chile

© 2020 DSpace
  • Access my account