97th ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10, 2012)

COS 143-4 - Pollinator diversity and short-term foraging specialization

Thursday, August 9, 2012: 9:00 AM
F149, Oregon Convention Center
Berry J. Brosi, Department of Environmental Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA and Heather Mae Briggs, Dept. of Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA
Background/Question/Methods

How will the losses of pollinator species and populations affect plant reproductive function? This is a question of central importance for the long-term persistence of healthy, functioning ecosystems and for the security and productivity of the human agricultural enterprise. We investigated the hypothesis that interspecific competition mediates pollinator short-term foraging specialization on plant species, an important component of successful pollination interactions. If this hypothesis is correct, pollinator species losses will reduce short-term foraging specialization in the remaining pollinators in a community, with potentially deleterious effects on plant reproduction. We tested this hypothesis in three ways: 1) manipulative field experiments that temporarily reduced bee species richness; 2) comparative studies along gradients of bee diversity; and 3) controlled multi-species foraging trials in the laboratory. We conducted comparative and manipulative studies in subalpine meadows in Colorado, and additional comparative work in a largely deforested tropical landscape in southern Costa Rica. We assessed short-term foraging specialization through direct observations of foraging sequences as well as pollen load analysis.

Results/Conclusions

We continue to gather and analyze data, but preliminary results indicate significant reductions in short-term foraging specialization in reduced-diversity manipulated vs. control plots; in less-diverse sites along bee diversity gradients; and in controlled laboratory trials with fewer bee species. These results indicate that, across a wide range of ecological contexts, pollinator community composition may contribute to shaping foraging specialization, which in turn is likely to have important ecosystem functional implications.