Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, The A. Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, The A. Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Nov 19;372(1734). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0256.
The interactions between flowering plants and insect pollinators shape ecological communities and provide one of the best examples of coevolution. Although these interactions have received much attention in both ecology and evolution, their temporal aspects are little explored. Here we review studies on the circadian organization of pollination-related traits in bees and flowers. Research, mostly with the honeybee, , has implicated the circadian clock in key aspects of their foraging for flower rewards. These include anticipation, timing of visits to flowers at specified locations and time-compensated sun-compass orientation. Floral rhythms in traits such as petal opening, scent release and reward availability also show robust daily rhythms. However, in only few studies was it possible to adequately determine whether these oscillations are driven by external time givers such as light and temperature cycles, or endogenous circadian clocks. The interplay between the timing of flower and pollinator rhythms may be ecologically significant. Circadian regulation of pollination-related traits in only few species may influence the entire pollination network and thus affect community structure and local biodiversity. We speculate that these intricate chronobiological interactions may be vulnerable to anthropogenic effects such as the introduction of alien invasive species, pesticides or environmental pollutants.This article is part of the themed issue 'Wild clocks: integrating chronobiology and ecology to understand timekeeping in free-living animals'.
开花植物与昆虫传粉者之间的相互作用塑造了生态群落,并提供了协同进化的最佳范例之一。尽管这些相互作用在生态学和进化生物学中都受到了广泛关注,但它们的时间方面却很少被探索。在这里,我们回顾了有关蜜蜂和花朵传粉相关特征的昼夜节律组织的研究。研究主要针对蜜蜂,表明生物钟参与了它们寻找花朵奖励的关键方面,包括对花的预期、在特定地点和时间访问花朵以及时间补偿的太阳罗盘定向。花的特征,如花瓣张开、香气释放和奖励可用性也表现出明显的日常节律。然而,在为数不多的研究中,我们才有可能充分确定这些波动是否是由外部时间因素(如光照和温度周期)或内源性生物钟驱动的。花和传粉者节律的时间安排相互作用可能具有生态意义。只有少数物种中与传粉相关的特征的昼夜节律调节可能会影响整个传粉网络,从而影响群落结构和局部生物多样性。我们推测,这些错综复杂的时间生物学相互作用可能容易受到人为影响,如外来入侵物种、杀虫剂或环境污染物的引入。本文是主题为“野生时钟:整合时间生物学和生态学以了解自由生活动物的计时”的特刊的一部分。