Tritrophic interactions in a pollination system: impacts of species composition and size of flower patches on the hunting success of a flower-dwelling spider
Vr. Schmalhofer, Tritrophic interactions in a pollination system: impacts of species composition and size of flower patches on the hunting success of a flower-dwelling spider, OECOLOGIA, 129(2), 2001, pp. 292-303
Size and species composition of flower patches were manipulated to determin
e whether these factors exerted indirect effects on the hunting success of
flower-dwelling spiders via direct effects on insect pollinators. Multivari
ate analysis of variance (MANOVA) of two pollinator response variables (vis
itation rate and visitor size) revealed a significant pollinator preference
for Bidens aristosa (tickseed sunflower) over Solidago juncea (goldenrod)
and for large patches of a given plant species over small patches. Bidens r
eceived significantly more pollinator visits per floral unit per unit time
and attracted significantly larger insects than Solidago. The significant p
atch size effect seen in the MANOVA was driven by the strong impact of patc
h size on the size of insects visiting the experimental patches: the size (
mass) of insects visiting large patches was significantly greater than the
size of insects visiting small patches of a given plant species, but visita
tion rates to large and small patches of a given plant species were similar
. MANOVA indicated that hunting success of a flower-dwelling crab spider, M
isumenoides formosipes, was also significantly affected by species composit
ion and size of flower patches. Three measures of spider hunting success (r
ate of mass gain and its components, total prey mass captured per spider pe
r day, and number of prey captured per spider per day) were evaluated, and
the experimental treatments exerted similar effects on all three measures.
Spiders occupying Bidens patches experienced greater hunting success than s
piders occupying Solidago patches, and in patches of a given plant species,
spiders occupying large patches experienced greater hunting success than s
piders occupying small patches. The pattern of spider hunting success most
closely paralleled the pattern described by the size or insects visiting th
e patches (BL > BS=SL > SS), suggesting that the size of visiting pollinato
rs, rather than frequency of visitation, exerted a greater influence on spi
der hunting success. Taxonomic composition of a spider's diet varied with t
he plant species occupied. The size of insects captured by spiders was sign
ificantly greater than average size of insects visiting the patches, indica
ting that spiders selectively captured larger pollinator taxa. Spider movem
ents among patches revealed a pattern of migration from Solidago to Bidens.