Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Sponsler D., Kallnik K., Requier Fabrice, Classen A., Maihoff A. F., Sieger J., Steffan-Dewenter I. (2022). Floral preferences of mountain bumble bees are constrained by functional traits but flexible through elevation and season. Oikos, 2022 (3), e08902 [12 p.]. ISSN 0030-1299.

Titre du document
Floral preferences of mountain bumble bees are constrained by functional traits but flexible through elevation and season
Année de publication
2022
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000731626700001
Auteurs
Sponsler D., Kallnik K., Requier Fabrice, Classen A., Maihoff A. F., Sieger J., Steffan-Dewenter I.
Source
Oikos, 2022, 2022 (3), e08902 [12 p.] ISSN 0030-1299
Patterns of resource use by animals can clarify how ecological communities have assembled in the past, how they currently function and how they are likely to respond to future perturbations. Bumble bees (Hymentoptera: Bombus spp.) and their floral hosts provide a diverse yet tractable system in which to explore resource selection in the context of plant-pollinator networks. Under conditions of resource limitation, the ability of bumble bees species to coexist should depend on dietary niche overlap. In this study, we report patterns and dynamics of floral morphotype preferences in a mountain bumble bee community based on similar to 13 000 observations of bumble bee floral visits recorded along a 1400 m elevation gradient. We found that bumble bees are highly selective generalists, rarely visiting floral morphotypes at the rates predicted by their relative abundances. Preferences also differed markedly across bumble bee species, and these differences were well-explained by variation in bumble bee tongue length, generating patterns of preference similarity that should be expected to predict competition under conditions of resource limitation. Within species, though, morphotype preferences varied by elevation and season, possibly representing adaptive flexibility in response to the high elevational and seasonal turnover of mountain floral communities. Patterns of resource partitioning among bumble bee communities may determine which species can coexist under the altered distributions of bumble bees and their floral hosts caused by climate and land use change.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Sciences du monde végétal [076] ; Sciences du monde animal [080]
Description Géographique
ALLEMAGNE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010083853]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010083853
Contact