Aslan Clare E, Zavaleta Erika S, Tershy Bernie, Croll Don, Robichaux Robert H
Department of Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, U.S.A.; Conservation Education and Science Department, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Tucson, AZ, 85743, U.S.A..
Conserv Biol. 2014 Apr;28(2):478-88. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12193. Epub 2013 Dec 20.
Native plant species that have lost their mutualist partners may require non-native pollinators or seed dispersers to maintain reproduction. When natives are highly specialized, however, it appears doubtful that introduced generalists will partner effectively with them. We used visitation observations and pollination treatments (experimental manipulations of pollen transfer) to examine relationships between the introduced, generalist Japanese White-eye (Zosterops japonicus) and 3 endemic Hawaiian plant species (Clermontia parviflora, C. montis-loa, and C. hawaiiensis). These plants are characterized by curved, tubular flowers, apparently adapted for pollination by curve-billed Hawaiian honeycreepers. Z. japonicus were responsible for over 80% of visits to flowers of the small-flowered C. parviflora and the midsize-flowered C. montis-loa. Z. japonicus-visited flowers set significantly more seed than did bagged flowers. Z. japonicus also demonstrated the potential to act as an occasional Clermontia seed disperser, although ground-based frugivory by non-native mammals likely dominates seed dispersal. The large-flowered C. hawaiiensis received no visitation by any birds during observations. Unmanipulated and bagged C. hawaiiensis flowers set similar numbers of seeds. Direct examination of Z. japonicus and Clermontia morphologies suggests a mismatch between Z. japonicus bill morphology and C. hawaiiensis flower morphology. In combination, our results suggest that Z. japonicus has established an effective pollination relationship with C. parviflora and C. montis-loa and that the large flowers of C. hawaiiensis preclude effective visitation by Z. japonicus.
失去了共生伙伴的本地植物物种可能需要非本地传粉者或种子传播者来维持繁殖。然而,当本地植物高度特化时,引入的泛化物种能否有效地与它们合作就值得怀疑了。我们通过访花观察和授粉处理(对花粉传播的实验性操作)来研究引入的泛化物种日本绣眼鸟(Zosterops japonicus)与3种夏威夷特有植物物种(小花克莱蒙氏木(Clermontia parviflora)、莫纳罗亚克莱蒙氏木(C. montis-loa)和夏威夷克莱蒙氏木(C. hawaiiensis))之间的关系。这些植物的特点是花朵呈弯曲的管状,显然是为适应弯嘴夏威夷吸蜜鸟授粉而进化的。日本绣眼鸟对小花克莱蒙氏木和中型花莫纳罗亚克莱蒙氏木的花朵访问率超过80%。日本绣眼鸟访问过的花朵结出的种子明显比套袋花朵多。日本绣眼鸟还显示出偶尔充当克莱蒙氏木种子传播者的潜力,不过非本地哺乳动物在地面的果实取食可能在种子传播中占主导地位。在观察期间,大花夏威夷克莱蒙氏木没有受到任何鸟类的访问。未处理和套袋的夏威夷克莱蒙氏木花朵结出的种子数量相似。对日本绣眼鸟和克莱蒙氏木形态的直接检查表明,日本绣眼鸟的喙形态与夏威夷克莱蒙氏木的花朵形态不匹配。综合来看,我们的结果表明,日本绣眼鸟与小花克莱蒙氏木和莫纳罗亚克莱蒙氏木建立了有效的授粉关系,而夏威夷克莱蒙氏木的大花使日本绣眼鸟无法有效访问。