Schmalhofer Victoria R
Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolution, Rutgers University, Cook College, 14 College Farm Rd., 08901-8551, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Oecologia. 2001 Oct;129(2):292-303. doi: 10.1007/s004420100726. Epub 2001 Oct 1.
Size and species composition of flower patches were manipulated to determine whether these factors exerted indirect effects on the hunting success of flower-dwelling spiders via direct effects on insect pollinators. Multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) of two pollinator response variables (visitation rate and visitor size) revealed a significant pollinator preference for Bidens aristosa (tickseed sunflower) over Solidago juncea (goldenrod) and for large patches of a given plant species over small patches. Bidens received significantly more pollinator visits per floral unit per unit time and attracted significantly larger insects than Solidago. The significant patch size effect seen in the MANOVA was driven by the strong impact of patch size on the size of insects visiting the experimental patches: the size (mass) of insects visiting large patches was significantly greater than the size of insects visiting small patches of a given plant species, but visitation rates to large and small patches of a given plant species were similar. MANOVA indicated that hunting success of a flower-dwelling crab spider, Misumenoides formosipes, was also significantly affected by species composition and size of flower patches. Three measures of spider hunting success (rate of mass gain and its components, total prey mass captured per spider per day, and number of prey captured per spider per day) were evaluated, and the experimental treatments exerted similar effects on all three measures. Spiders occupying Bidens patches experienced greater hunting success than spiders occupying Solidago patches, and in patches of a given plant species, spiders occupying large patches experienced greater hunting success than spiders occupying small patches. The pattern of spider hunting success most closely paralleled the pattern described by the size of insects visiting the patches (BL>BS=SL>SS), suggesting that the size of visiting pollinators, rather than frequency of visitation, exerted a greater influence on spider hunting success. Taxonomic composition of a spider's diet varied with the plant species occupied. The size of insects captured by spiders was significantly greater than average size of insects visiting the patches, indicating that spiders selectively captured larger pollinator taxa. Spider movements among patches revealed a pattern of migration from Solidago to Bidens.
通过操纵花斑块的大小和物种组成,来确定这些因素是否通过对昆虫传粉者的直接影响,对栖息在花上的蜘蛛的捕猎成功率产生间接影响。对两个传粉者反应变量(访花率和访客大小)进行多变量方差分析(MANOVA),结果显示传粉者对三叶鬼针草(鬼针草向日葵)的偏好显著高于灯芯草蚤缀(一枝黄花),且对给定植物物种的大斑块的偏好高于小斑块。与灯芯草蚤缀相比,三叶鬼针草每个花单元在单位时间内获得的传粉者访花显著更多,吸引的昆虫也显著更大。多变量方差分析中观察到的显著斑块大小效应,是由斑块大小对访问实验斑块的昆虫大小的强烈影响驱动的:访问大斑块的昆虫大小(质量)显著大于访问给定植物物种小斑块的昆虫大小,但访问给定植物物种大斑块和小斑块的访花率相似。多变量方差分析表明,栖息在花上的蟹蛛——台湾花蛛的捕猎成功率也受到花斑块的物种组成和大小的显著影响。评估了蜘蛛捕猎成功率的三个指标(体重增加率及其组成部分、每只蜘蛛每天捕获的猎物总质量、每只蜘蛛每天捕获的猎物数量),实验处理对这三个指标都产生了类似的影响。占据三叶鬼针草斑块的蜘蛛比占据灯芯草蚤缀斑块的蜘蛛捕猎成功率更高,并且在给定植物物种的斑块中,占据大斑块的蜘蛛比占据小斑块的蜘蛛捕猎成功率更高。蜘蛛捕猎成功率的模式与访问斑块的昆虫大小所描述的模式最为相似(大斑块上的大昆虫>大斑块上的小昆虫=小斑块上的大昆虫>小斑块上的小昆虫),这表明访花传粉者的大小而非访花频率,对蜘蛛捕猎成功率的影响更大。蜘蛛食物的分类组成因所占据的植物物种而异。蜘蛛捕获的昆虫大小显著大于访问斑块的昆虫平均大小,这表明蜘蛛会选择性地捕获更大的传粉者类群。蜘蛛在斑块之间的移动显示出从灯芯草蚤缀迁移到三叶鬼针草的模式。