Publication details

Pollen presentation mitigates competition for pollinators due to diurnal stratification of pollen transfer

Authors

STENC Jakub JANOSIK Lukas FREUDENFELD Martin MATOUSKOVA Eva HADRAVA Jiri MIKAT Michael DANKOVA Klara HADRAVOVA Tereza RYSAN Tadeas SIMONOVA Jasna KOUPILOVA Klara HAVELDOVA Alice KONECNA Eliska MARTINEK Jan JELINKOVA Barbora VOSOLSOBE Stanislav DOBESOVA Karolina SMYCKOVA Marie SMYCKA Jan SMYCKOVA Jitka STUDENA Lucie NOVACEK Josef KANE Stepan KNOTKOVÁ Kateřina FIGURA Tomas SIMON-PRAZAK Jan CERMAKOVA Katerina JANOUSEK Jiri BOCAN Vaclav BROZ Vojtech SUCHA Anna HORCICKOVA Eva DVORAK Tomas JOR Tomas POZAROVA Doubravka PLAVEC Karel JANOVSKY Zdenek

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ppees.2025.125868
Doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ppees.2025.125868
Keywords Centaurea jacea; Plant sexual reproduction; Pollen release schedule; Pollinator diurnal activity; Pollinator sharing; Succisa pratensis; Trifolium hybridum
Description Pollen presentation and release strategies are believed to affect the timing of plant-pollinator interactions and therefore play a crucial role in pollen transfer. However, only limited evidence links pollen release and temporal changes in the pollen load carried by pollinators. In the present study, we aim to investigate how different pollen presentation strategies affect both the quantity and quality of pollen transferred by plant pollinators and discuss the potential for structuring plant-pollinator networks. We investigated pollen load on pollinators collected from three co-flowering species during the daytime with a known pollen presentation strategy: Succisa pratensis releasing pollen early in the morning, Centaurea jacea employs a gradual pollen presentation and Trifolium hybridum with explosive pollen release during pollinator visits. We compared the temporal patterns in the number of conspecific pollen grains (pollen of visited plant species) on the bodies of pollinators(pollen quantity) and in the proportions of the total pollen load (pollen quality) for different pollinators of the studied plant species. Then we linked pollen transfer to the pollinator visitation pattern during the day.The three plant species differed in the pattern of pollen transfer by their pollinators. Pollinators of Succisa pratensis carried the majority of the pollen in the morning after the pollen was released followed by a drop in both pollen quantity and quality. Pollinators of C. jacea and T. hybridum carried less variable pollen loads over time, which we explain by plant spatial density (C. jacea) and flower morphology combined with a pollen release strategy (T. hybridum). By linking the diurnal pattern of pollen transfer with the pollinator visitation pattern, our results demonstrate the diurnal structuring of pollen transfer and the plant's ability to mitigate the negative effect of pollinator sharing.

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