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Ecol Evol


Title:Characterization of Salix nigra floral insect community and activity of three native Andrena bees
Author(s):Simon SJ; Keefover-Ring K; Park YL; Wimp G; Grady J; DiFazio SP;
Address:Department of Biology West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA. Departments of Botany and Geography University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison WI USA. Division of Plant & Soil Sciences West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA. Department of Biology Georgetown University Washington DC USA
Journal Title:Ecol Evol
Year:2021
Volume:20210318
Issue:9
Page Number:4688 - 4700
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7369
ISSN/ISBN:2045-7758 (Print) 2045-7758 (Electronic) 2045-7758 (Linking)
Abstract:"Salix nigra (black willow) is a widespread tree that hosts many species of polylectic hymenopterans and oligolectic bees of the genus Andrena. The early flowering of S. nigra makes it an important nutritive resource for arthropods emerging from hibernation. However, since S. nigra is dioecious, not all insect visits will lead to successful pollination. Using both visual observation and pan-trapping, we characterized the community of arthropods that visited S. nigra flowers and assessed differences among male and female trees as well as the chemical and visual drivers that influenced community composition across 3 years. We found that male trees consistently supported higher diversity of insects than female trees and only three insect species, all Andrena spp., consistently visited both sexes. Additionally, Andrena nigrae, which was the only insect that occurred more on female than male flowers, correlated strongly to volatile cues. This suggests that cross-pollinators cue into specific aspects of floral scent, but diversity of floral visitors is driven strongly by visual cues of yellow male pollen. Through time, the floral activity of two Andrena species remained stable, but A. nigrae visited less in 2017 when flowers bloomed earlier than other years. When native bee emergence does not synchronize with bloom, activity appears to be diminished which could threaten species that subsist on a single host. Despite the community diversity of S. nigra flowers, its productivity depends on a small fraction of species that are not threatened by competition, but rather rapidly changing conditions that lead to host-insect asynchrony"
Keywords:Andrena Dioecy Salix floral volatiles pollinator community;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINESimon, Sandra J Keefover-Ring, Ken Park, Yong-Lak Wimp, Gina Grady, Julianne DiFazio, Stephen P eng England 2021/05/13 Ecol Evol. 2021 Mar 18; 11(9):4688-4700. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7369. eCollection 2021 May"

 
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