VISITATION OF EVENING PRIMROSE BY CARPENTER BEES - EVIDENCE OF A MIXED POLLINATION SYNDROME

Citation
Jf. Barthell et Jmh. Knops, VISITATION OF EVENING PRIMROSE BY CARPENTER BEES - EVIDENCE OF A MIXED POLLINATION SYNDROME, The Southwestern naturalist, 42(1), 1997, pp. 86-93
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00384909
Volume
42
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
86 - 93
Database
ISI
SICI code
0038-4909(1997)42:1<86:VOEPBC>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Evening primrose, Oenothera elata, is generally considered a hawkmoth- pollinated plant species that exhibits several characteristics of a mo th pollination syndrome. We re-examined its reproductive biology by te sting the hypothesis that a twilight-foraging carpenter bee, Xylocopa tabaniformis orpifex, can serve as its pollinator. In our study popula tion, pollen was deposited by carpenter bees on 56% of all the flower stigmas that were monitored during evening periods and at least 70% of those monitored during successive evening and morning periods; flower s that only carpenter bees were allowed to visit produced healthy seed pods about 3 weeks later. Given the effectiveness of X. tabaniformis as a pollinator and its overlap in range with Oenothera elata, we beli eve a mixed pollination syndrome that includes both bees and moths is a more appropriate characterization of the pollination biology of this plant species.