Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Pollination and breeding systems of selected wildflowers in a southern African grassland community
Author
Johnson, S D
Harris, L Fabienne
Proches, S
Publisher
South African Journal of Botany
Publication Year
2009
Body

Southern African grasslands harbour diverse plant communities, and recent studies have revealed remarkable plant-pollinator interactions in this biome. However, there has been no attempt to study community-wide patterns in breeding systems or plant-pollinator mutualisms. Here, we present the results of extensive field work on twenty-one wildflower species with large, showy flowers, belonging to a broad range of angiosperm families. Most of the plant species investigated were found to be self-incompatible and therefore completely dependent on pollinators. Based on over 250 h of field observations during which we recorded over 1000 individual insects, 368 of which were examined for pollen loads, we identified pollination systems involving, inter alia, bees and flies (both short- and long-tongued), wasps, butterflies, hawkmoths, beetles, and sunbirds. The most important pollinators of the wildflowers investigated in the community were long-tongued solitary bees. Several plant species appear to be dependent on a single or a few pollinator species, and few are true generalists. This high degree of specialisation indicates a well-structured pollination landscape, suggesting both a history of climatic and ecological stability and potential sensitivity to human disturbance.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
75
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
630-645
Journal Name
South African Journal of Botany
Keywords
Breeding systems
grassland vegetation
Mutualistic networks
Plant-pollinator interactions
Pollination systems
grasslands
insects
ecology
birds
disturbance
southern Africa