Lara Carlos, Ornelas Juan
Departamento de Ecología y Comportamiento Animal, Instituto de Ecología, A.C., Apdo. Postal 63, Xalapa, 91000, Veracruz, México.
Oecologia. 2001 Jul;128(2):263-273. doi: 10.1007/s004420100640. Epub 2001 Jul 1.
Long flower tubes have been traditionally viewed as the result of coevolution between plants and specialized, legitimate, long billed-pollinators. However, nectar robbers may have played a role in selection acting on corolla length. This study evaluated whether hummingbirds are more likely to rob flowers with longer corollas from which they cannot efficiently extract nectar with legitimate visits. We compared two hummingbird species with similar bill lengths (Lampornis amethystinus and Colibri thalassinus) visiting floral arrays of artificial flowers with exaggerated corolla lengths, and also evaluated how the birds extract nectar rewards from medium to long corollas of three hummingbird-pollinated plants (Salvia mexicana, S. iodantha and Ipomoea hederifolia). The consequences of foraging for plant fitness were evaluated in terms of seed production per flower. Variation in seed production after legitimate visits of hummingbird-pollinated plants was mostly explained by differences in pollinator effectiveness. Seed production did not increase with the number of legitimate visits to a flower, except in I. hederifolia. We found that birds were more likely to rob both artificial and natural flowers with long corolla tubes. Nectar robbing was not observed on short-corolla flowers of Salvia spp., but robbing negatively affected seed production of long-tubed flowers of I. hederifolia. Significant differences between hummingbird species in the use of this behavior were observed, but males and females behaved alike. We suggest that short-billed hummingbirds with enlarged bill serrations (the edge of both tomia finely toothed) may have an advantage in illegitimately feeding at long-corolla flowers. This raises the possibility of counter-selection on increasing corolla length by nectar robbers.
传统上,长花管被视为植物与专门的、合法的长喙传粉者共同进化的结果。然而,盗蜜者可能在影响花冠长度的选择过程中发挥了作用。本研究评估了蜂鸟是否更有可能盗取花冠较长的花朵的花蜜,因为它们无法通过合法访问有效地获取花蜜。我们比较了两种喙长相似的蜂鸟(紫辉尾蜂鸟和绿腹翠蜂鸟)访问花冠长度被夸大的人造花阵列的情况,还评估了这些鸟类如何从三种蜂鸟传粉植物(墨西哥鼠尾草、碘色鼠尾草和裂叶牵牛)的中长花冠中获取花蜜回报。从每朵花的种子产量方面评估了觅食对植物适合度的影响。蜂鸟传粉植物在合法访问后的种子产量变化大多由传粉者效率的差异来解释。除了裂叶牵牛外,一朵花的合法访问次数增加并不会使种子产量增加。我们发现,鸟类更有可能盗取花冠管长的人造花和天然花的花蜜。在鼠尾草属植物的短花冠花朵上未观察到盗蜜现象,但盗蜜对裂叶牵牛长管花的种子产量有负面影响。在使用这种行为方面,观察到蜂鸟物种之间存在显著差异,但雄性和雌性的行为相似。我们认为,具有扩大的喙锯齿(上喙边缘细齿状)的短喙蜂鸟可能在非法取食长花冠花朵方面具有优势。这增加了盗蜜者对花冠长度增加进行反向选择的可能性。