Liu Hong, Pemberton Robert W
University of Florida, IFAS, 3205 College Ave, Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33312, USA.
Oecologia. 2009 Mar;159(3):515-25. doi: 10.1007/s00442-008-1232-6. Epub 2008 Dec 9.
Our understanding of the effects of introduced invasive pollinators on plants has been exclusively drawn from studies on introduced social bees. One might expect, however, that the impacts of introduced solitary bees, with much lower population densities and fewer foragers, would be small. Yet little is known about the potential effects of naturalized solitary bees on the environment. We took advantage of the recent naturalization of an orchid bee, Euglossa viridissima, in southern Florida to study the effects of this solitary bee on reproduction of Solanum torvum, an invasive shrub. Flowers of S. torvum require specialized buzz pollination. Through timed floral visitor watches and two pollination treatments (control and pollen supplementation) at three forest edge and three open area sites, we found that the fruit set of S. torvum was pollen limited at the open sites where the native bees dominate, but was not pollen limited at the forest sites where the invasive orchid bees dominate. The orchid bee's pollination efficiency was nearly double that of the native halictid bees, and was also slightly higher than that of the native carpenter bee. Experiments using small and large mesh cages (to deny or allow E. viridissima access, respectively) at one forest site indicated that when the orchid bee was excluded, the flowers set one-quarter as many fruit as when the bee was allowed access. The orchid bee was the most important pollinator of the weed at the forest sites, which could pose additional challenges to the management of this weed in the fragmented, endangered tropical hardwood forests in the region. This specialized invasive mutualism may promote populations of both the orchid bee and this noxious weed. Invasive solitary bees, particularly species that are specialized pollinators, appear to have more importance than has previously been recognized.
我们对引入的入侵传粉者对植物影响的理解完全来自于对引入的群居蜜蜂的研究。然而,有人可能会认为,引入的独居蜜蜂种群密度低得多且觅食者较少,其影响会很小。然而,关于归化独居蜜蜂对环境的潜在影响却知之甚少。我们利用一种兰花蜂——绿翅尤金蜂最近在佛罗里达州南部归化的机会,研究这种独居蜜蜂对一种入侵灌木——刺茄繁殖的影响。刺茄的花需要特殊的震动传粉。通过在三个森林边缘和三个开阔地进行定时的访花观察以及两种授粉处理(对照和补充花粉),我们发现,在本地蜜蜂占主导的开阔地,刺茄的坐果受花粉限制,但在入侵兰花蜂占主导的森林地,不受花粉限制。兰花蜂的授粉效率几乎是本地隧蜂的两倍,也略高于本地木蜂。在一个森林地点使用小网笼和大网笼(分别用于阻止或允许绿翅尤金蜂进入)进行的实验表明,当排除兰花蜂时,花朵结出的果实数量只有允许该蜂进入时的四分之一。在森林地,兰花蜂是这种杂草最重要的传粉者,这可能给该地区碎片化的濒危热带硬木森林中这种杂草的管理带来额外挑战。这种特殊的入侵互利共生关系可能会促进兰花蜂和这种有害杂草的种群数量增长。入侵的独居蜜蜂,尤其是那些专门传粉的物种,似乎比之前认为的更重要。