School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Sep 19;19(9):e0310679. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310679. eCollection 2024.
Animal-mediated pollination determines the reproductive success of most flowering plants; this process however can be disrupted by environmental degradation, with habitat loss and fragmentation highlighted as a top driver of pollination deficits. Despite being a pervasive stressor worldwide, we still have rather limited empirical evidence on its effects on pollination services, especially for early spring pollination syndromes. We investigate this using a potted plant phytometry experiment in which we placed English Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta)-a species largely pollinated in spring-into a fragmented woodland habitat. We selected 51 woodland patches which varied in both size and distance from each other and placed 153 pots of bluebell plants in the patches for c.4 weeks to measure pollination. The woodlands were located in a matrix of grassland, the latter being of low plant species richness and overall in the patches, woodland plants showed a positive species-area relationship. We collected traits on bluebell reproduction, these included the number, size, quality of seeds, the number of seed capsules and the number of flowers that failed to set any seeds. We found that seed traits responded differently to patch area and isolation. Patch isolation negatively affected the number of seeds and capsules, whilst it did not affect the size and quality of seeds. Patch area had no effect on any traits, suggesting that patch area might not necessarily be a factor that affects pollination in this species. The number of flowers that failed to set seed was unaffected by either patch area or isolation. Our study suggests that woodland fragmentation impacts the pollination of understory spring flowering plants. Our results highlight the use of multiple traits of phytometer plants to evaluate pollination and the importance of connectivity in maintaining pollination services in small-fragmented landscapes.
动物介导的传粉决定了大多数开花植物的繁殖成功;然而,这一过程可能会受到环境退化的干扰,其中栖息地丧失和破碎化被认为是传粉减少的首要驱动因素。尽管它是全球普遍存在的压力源,但我们对其对传粉服务的影响仍然只有相当有限的经验证据,尤其是对于早春传粉综合征。我们通过一个盆栽植物植物测定实验来研究这一点,在实验中,我们将主要在春季传粉的英国风铃草(Hyacinthoides non-scripta)种放入一个破碎的林地栖息地。我们选择了 51 个林地斑块,这些斑块在大小和彼此之间的距离上都有所不同,并在斑块中放置了 153 盆风铃草植物,持续约 4 周以测量传粉。林地位于草地基质中,后者的植物物种丰富度低,总体上,林地植物表现出正的物种-面积关系。我们收集了风铃草繁殖的特征,包括种子的数量、大小、质量、种子胶囊的数量和未能产生任何种子的花朵的数量。我们发现,种子特征对斑块面积和隔离的反应不同。斑块隔离对种子和胶囊的数量产生负面影响,而对种子的大小和质量没有影响。斑块面积对任何特征都没有影响,这表明斑块面积不一定是影响该物种传粉的因素。未能产生种子的花朵数量不受斑块面积或隔离的影响。我们的研究表明,林地破碎化会影响林下早春开花植物的传粉。我们的研究结果强调了使用植物测定植物的多个特征来评估传粉,并强调了在小而破碎的景观中保持传粉服务的连通性的重要性。