Krauss Siegfried L, Roberts David G, Phillips Ryan D, Edwards Caroline
Science Directorate Botanic Garden and Parks Authority Kings Park and Botanic Garden Perth Western Australia Australia.
School of Biological Science The University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2018 Aug 24;8(18):9304-9314. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4438. eCollection 2018 Sep.
Identification of pollen vectors is a fundamental objective of pollination biology. The foraging and social behavior of these pollinators has profound effects on plant mating, making quantification of their behavior critical for understanding the ecological and evolutionary consequences of different pollinators for the plants they visit. However, accurate quantification of visitation may be problematic, especially for shy animals and/or when the temporal and spatial scale of observation desired is large. Sophisticated heat- and movement-triggered motion-sensor cameras ("camera trapping") provide new, underutilized tools to address these challenges. However, to date, there has been no rigorous evaluation of the sampling considerations needed for using camera trapping in pollination research.We measured the effectiveness of camera trapping for identifying vertebrate visitors and quantifying their visitation rates and foraging behavior on (Proteaceae). Multiple still cameras (Reconyx HC 500) and a video camera (Little Acorn LTL5210A) were deployed.From 2,753 recorded visits by vertebrates, we identified five species of nectarivorous honeyeater (Meliphagidae) and the honey possum (Tarsipedidae), with significant variation in the species composition of visitors among inflorescences. Species of floral visitor showed significant variation in their time of peak activity, duration of visits, and numbers of flowers probed per visit. Where multiple cameras were deployed on individual inflorescences, effectiveness of individual still cameras varied from 15% to 86% of all recorded visits. Methodological issues and solutions, and the future uses of camera traps in pollination biology, are discussed. : Motion-triggered cameras are promising tools for the quantification of vertebrate visitation and some aspects of behavior on flowers. However, researchers need to be mindful of the variation in effectiveness of individual camera traps in detecting animals. Pollinator studies using camera traps are in their infancy, and the full potential of this developing technology is yet to be realized.
识别花粉传播媒介是传粉生物学的一个基本目标。这些传粉者的觅食和社会行为对植物交配有着深远影响,因此对其行为进行量化对于理解不同传粉者对它们所访问植物的生态和进化后果至关重要。然而,准确量化访问情况可能存在问题,尤其是对于害羞的动物和/或当所需观察的时间和空间尺度较大时。先进的热触发和运动触发式运动传感器相机(“相机诱捕”)提供了新的、未充分利用的工具来应对这些挑战。然而,迄今为止,尚未对在传粉研究中使用相机诱捕所需的抽样考虑因素进行严格评估。我们测量了相机诱捕在识别脊椎动物访客、量化其访问率和在[山龙眼科植物]上的觅食行为方面的有效性。部署了多个静态相机(Reconyx HC 500)和一台摄像机(Little Acorn LTL5210A)。从脊椎动物记录的2753次访问中,我们识别出了五种食蜜吸蜜鸟(吸蜜鸟科)和蜜袋鼯(长吻袋貂科),不同花序间访客的物种组成存在显著差异。访花物种在其活动高峰期时间、访问持续时间和每次访问探查的花朵数量上表现出显著差异。在单个花序上部署多个相机时,单个静态相机的有效性在所有记录访问的15%至86%之间变化。文中讨论了方法学问题及解决方案,以及相机诱捕在传粉生物学中的未来应用。结论:运动触发式相机是量化脊椎动物访花及花朵上某些行为方面的有前景的工具。然而,研究人员需要注意单个相机诱捕在检测动物方面有效性的差异。使用相机诱捕的传粉者研究尚处于起步阶段,这项新兴技术的全部潜力尚未实现。