PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Birds visiting flowers of erythrina suberosa: their abundance, frequency of visits and role as pollinators in a sub-tropical montane forest of Garhwal Himalaya

Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Bird pollination is specific among flowering plants which support mostly cross pollination and has been regarded as an important pollination syndrome. Frequency of bird pollinators visiting flowers of the corky coral tree Erythrina suberosa Roxb., was studied in a subtropical montane forest located in Garhwal Himalaya, India. Forty trees were selected randomly in the population and the observations on birds visitors were recorded for 10 days during peak flowering. In total 18 bird species were found visiting flowers of E. suberosa. The bird species belonging to Passeriformes, Piciformes, Psittaciformes, and Cuculiformes were observed most frequently. The highest bird frequency and abundance among flower-visiting birds were recorded for the red-billed blue magpie Urocissa erythrorhyncha (26 ± 3.2 individuals per hour per branch and 60 birds per tree, respectively), whereas the lowest – for the verditer flycatcher Eumyias thalassinus (2 ± 0.02 individuals per hour per branch and 6 individuals per tree, respectively). Majority of the bird species followed bimodal pattern of foraging on nectar in a day (mostly morning and evenings), which is consistent with other studies carried out for other ornithophilous tree species in the Himalayan region. The birds observed in this study are presumed to be pollinators, as the majority of birds foraged on nectar of properly opened flowers oriented upwards; however, possibility of nectar robbing cannot be excluded and requires further investigation in future studies.
Rocznik
Strony
117--127
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 75 poz., fot., tab., rys.
Twórcy
  • Department of Forestry, College of Forestry, VCSG Uttarakhand University of Horticulture and Forestry, Ranichauri -249 199, Tehri Garhwal, Uttarakhand, India
Bibliografia
  • 1. Almeida E.M., Alves M.A.S. 2003 - Comportamento de aves nectarívoras em Erythrina speciosa Andrews (Leguminosae-Papilionoideae) em uma área de Floresta Atlântica, Ilha Grande, Rio de Janeiro - Revista Etologia, 5: 15-21.
  • 2. Anderson B., Cole W.W., Barrett S.C.H. 2005 - Specialized bird perch aids cross-pollination - Nature, 435: 41-42.
  • 3. Arceo-Gómez G., Ashman T.L. 2014 - Patterns of pollen quantity and quality limitation of pre-zygotic reproduction in Mimulus guttatus vary with co-flowering community context - Oikos, 123: 1261-1269.
  • 4. Baker H.G., Baker I. 1983 - Floral nectar sugar constituents in relation to pollinator type. (In: Handbook of experimental pollination biology, Eds: C.E. Jones, R.J. Little) - van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York, p. 117-214.
  • 5. Baker H.G., Baker I. 1990 - The predictive value of nectar chemistry to the recognition of pollinator types - Israel Journal of Botany, 39: 157-166.
  • 6. Baker H.G., Baker I., Hodges S.A. 1998 - Sugar composition of nectars and fruits consumed by birds and bats in thetropics and subtropics - Biotropica, 30: 559-586.
  • 7. Ballantyne G., Baldock K.C.R., Willmer P.G. 2015 - Constructing more informative plant-pollinator networks: visitation and pollen deposition networks in a heathland plant community - Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 282: 20151130.
  • 8. Bhandari S., Bisht M.S. 2013 - Community structure and relative abundance of bird fauna of different habitats of Garhwal Himalaya, Uttarakhand-India - International Journal of Science and Research, 4: 165-168.
  • 9. Bhatt, D., Joshi, K.K. 2011 - Bird assemblages in natural and urbanized habitats along elevational gradient in Nainital district (western Himalaya) of Uttarakhand state, India - Current Zoology, 57: 318-329.
  • 10. Campbell D.R. 1989 - Measurements of selection in a hermaphroditic plant: variation in male and female pollination success - Evolution, 43: 318-334.
  • 11. Chand V.P., Sukumaran A., Khanduri V.P. 2022 - Reproductive phenology and floral visitors in Rhododendron arboreum (Ericaceae) in a temperate forest of Garhwal Himalaya - Scientia Forestalis, 50, e3783.
  • 12. Christopher R.M., Goulson D., Castellanos C.M. 2021 - Novel nectar robbing negatively affects reproduction in Digitalis purpurea - Ecology and Evolution, 11(19): 13455-13463.
  • 13. Chung M.G., Kang S.S. 1996 - Genetic variation within and among populations of Camellia japonica (Theaceae) in Korea - Canadian Journal of Forestry Research, 26: 537-542.
  • 14. Courter J.R., Johnson R.J., Bridges W.C., Hubbard K.G. 2013 - Assessing migration of ruby-throated hummingbirds (Archilochus colubris) at broad spatial and temporal scales - Auk, 130: 107-117.
  • 15. Cox P.A. 1983 - Extinction of the Hawaiian avifauna resulted in a change of pollinators for the ieie, Freycinetia arborea -Oikos, 41: 195-199.
  • 16. Cronk Q., Ojeda I. 2008 - Bird-pollinated flowers in an evolutionary and molecular context - Journal of Experimental Botany, 59: 715-727.
  • 17. Cruden R.V. 1972 - Pollinators in high-elevation ecosystems: relative effectiveness of birds and bees - Science, 176: 1439-1440.
  • 18. Eilers E.J., Kremen C., Greenleaf S.S., Garber A.K., Klein A.M. 2011 - Contribution of pollinator-mediated crops to nutrients in the human food supply - PloS One, 6: e21363.
  • 19. Etcheverry A.V., Alemàn C.E.T. 2005 - Reproductive biology of Erythrina falcata (Fabaceae: Papilionoideae) - Biotropica, 37: 54-63.
  • 20. Etcheverry Á.V., Castro, F.D., Flemming, F.T., Maria A.M., Victor J.D., Spahr, L.D., Carolina Y.N., Gomez C.A. 2012 - Generalised pollination system of Erythrina dominguezii (Fabaceae: Papilionoideae) involving hummingbirds, passerines and bees - Australian Journal of Botany, 60: 484-494.
  • 21. Faegri K., van der Pijl L. 1966 - The principles of pollination ecology - Oxford, Pergamon.
  • 22. Feinsinger P., Linhart Y.B., Swarm L.A., Wolfe J.A. 1979 - Aspects of the pollination biology of three Erythrina species on Trinidad and Tobago - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 66: 451-471.
  • 23. Fenster C.B., Armbruster W.S., Wilson P., Dudash M.R., Thompson J.D. 2004 - Pollination syndromes and floral specialization - Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, 35: 375-403.
  • 24. Gibbons D.W., Hill D., Sutherland W.J. 1996 - Birds. (In: Ecological census techniques: a handbook, Ed.: W.J. Sutherland) - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 227-259.
  • 25. Hansen D.M., Olesen J.M., Jones C.G. 2002 - Tree, birds and bees in Mauritius: exploitative competition between introduced honey bees and endemic nectarivorous birds? - Journal of Biogeography, 29: 721-734.
  • 26. Huang S.Q., Fenster C.B. 2007 - Absence of long-proboscides pollinators for long corolla-tubed Himalayan Pedicularis species: implications for the evolution of corolla length - International Journal of Plant Science, 168: 325-331.
  • 27. Huang Z.H., Song Y.P., Huang S.Q. 2017 - Evidence for passerine bird pollination in Rhododendron species - AoB PLANTS, 9: plx062
  • 28. Kazmierczak K., Perlo B. 2000 - A field guide to the birds of India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and the Maldives - Om Book Service, New Delhi.
  • 29. Kearns C.A., Inouye D.W., Waser N.M. 1998 - Endangered mutualisms: the conservation of plant - pollinator interactions - Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 29: 83-12.
  • 30. Kenta T., Isagi Y., Nakagawa M., Yamashita M., Nakashizuka T. 2004 - Variation in pollen dispersal between years with different pollination conditions in a tropical emergent tree - Molecular Ecology, 13: 3575-3584.
  • 31. Khanduri V.P. 2016 - Mating system and seedling growth of five tropical tree species - Scientia Forestalis, 44: 509-517.
  • 32. Khanduri V.P., Kumar K.S. 2017 - Reproductive effort and success in Bombax ceiba L. in a tropical forest of Mizoram, Indo-Burma region of North-East India - Brazilian Journal of Botany, 40: 157-166.
  • 33. Khanduri V.P., Kumar K.S., Sharma C.M. 2015 - Role of pollen production in mating success in some tropical tree species - Brazilian Journal of Botany, 38: 107-112.
  • 34. Khanduri V.P., Kumar K.S., Sharma C.M., Riyal M.K., Kar K., Singh B., Sukumaran A. 2021 - Passerine birds supporting cross pollination in Erythrina stricta Roxb. - Dendrobiology, 85: 117-126.
  • 35. Khanduri V.P., Sharma C.M., Singh S.P. 2008 - The effects of climate change on plant phenology - The Environmentalist, 28: 143-147.
  • 36. Kukreti M. 2020 - Avian diversity in association with vegetation structure in outer foothills of Garhwal Himalayas, Uttarakhand - Journal of Himalayan Ecology and Sustainable Development, 15: 22-40.
  • 37. Kukreti M., Bhatt D. 2014 - Birds of lansdowne forest division and adjacent suburban landscapes, Garhwal Himalayas, Uttarakhand, India: Community structure and seasonal distribution - Biodiversitas, 15: 80-88.
  • 38. Kukreti M., Kukreti P.D. 2015 - Status and relative abundance of bird fauna in Pathiyaldhar valley, Garhwal Himalaya, India - International Journal of Pure and Applied Zoology, 3: 44-50.
  • 39. Kumar K.S., Khanduri V.P., Tripathi S.K. 2021 - Reproductive adaptations and the availability of pollinating vectors in white Indian teak (Gmelina arborea Roxb.) in tropical rain forest of Indo-Burma Hotspot - Trees, Forests and People, 3: 100058
  • 40. Kunitake Y.K., Hasegawa M., Miyashita T., Higuchi H. 2004 - Role of a seasonally specialist bird Zosterops japonica on pollen transfer and reproductive success of Camellia japonica in a temperate area - Plant Species Biology, 19: 197-201.
  • 41. Lammers T.G., Weller S.G., Sakai A.K. 1989 - Japanese white-eye, an introduced passerine, visits the flowers of Clermontia arborescens, an endemic Hawaiian lobelioid - Pacific Science, 41: 74-78.
  • 42. McKinney A.M., CaraDonna P.J., Inouye D.W., Barr B., Bertelsen C.D., Waser N.M. 2012 - Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early-season nectar resources - Ecology, 93: 1987-1993.
  • 43. Mendonça L.B., Anjos L.D. 2006 - Feeding behaviour of hummingbirds and perching birds on Erythrina speciosa Andrews (Fabaceae) flowers in an urban area, Londrina, Paraná, Brazil - Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 23: 42-49.
  • 44. Morton E.S. 1979 - Effective pollination of Erythrina fusca by the orchard oriole (Icterus spurious) coevolved behavioural manipulation - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 66: 482-489.
  • 45. Naithani A., Bhatt D. 2012 - Bird community structure in natural and urbanized habitats along an altitudinal gradient in Pauri district (Garhwal Himalaya) of Uttarakhand state, India - Biologia, 67: 800-808.
  • 46. Navarro L. 2001 - Reproductive biology and effect of nectar robbing on fruit production in Macleania bullata (Ericaceae) - Plant Ecology, 152: 59-65.
  • 47. Neill D.A. 1987 - Trapliners in the trees: hummingbird pollination of Erythrina Sect. Erythrina (Leguminosae: Papilionoideae) - Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 74: 27-41.
  • 48. Oh G.S., Kim J.H., Kang S.S., Yeeh Y., Chung M.G. 1995 - Spatial genetic structure among Korean populations of Camellia japonica and Eurya japonica (Theaceae) - Plant Species Biology, 10: 155-161.
  • 49. Olesen J.M. 1985 - The Macaronesian bird-flower element and its relation to bird and bee opportunists - Botanical Journal of Linnean Society, 91: 395-414.
  • 50. Olesen J.M., Rønsted N., Tolderlund U., Cor-nett C., Mølgaard P., Madsen J., Jones C.J., Olsen C.E. 1998 - Mauritian red nectar remains a mystery - Nature, 393: 529.
  • 51. Olesen J.M., Valido A. 2003 - Bird pollination in Madeira Island - Ardeola, 50: 65-67.
  • 52. Ollerton J., Winfree R., Tarrant S. 2011 - How many flowering plants are pollinated by animals? - Oikos, 120: 321-326.
  • 53. Pimm S.L., Pimm J.W. 1982 - Resource use, competition, and resource availability in Hawaiian honeycreepers - Ecology, 63: 1468-1480.
  • 54. Potts S.G., Biesmeijer J.C., Kremen C., Neumann P., Schweiger O., Kunin W.E. 2010 - Global pollinator declines: trends, impacts and drivers - Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 25: 345-353.
  • 55. Proctor M., Yeo P., Lack A. 1996 - The natural history of pollination - Harper Collins, London.
  • 56. Proctor M., Yeo P. 1973 - The pollination of flowers - Collins, London.
  • 57. Ragusa-Netto J. 2002 - Exploitation of Eryhtrina dominguezii Hassl. (Fabaceae) nectar by perching birds in a dry forest in western Brazil - Brazilian Journal of Biology, 62: 877-883.
  • 58. Raju A.J.S., Rao S.P., Zafar R., Roopkalpana P. 2004 - Passerine bird-pollination and fruiting behavior in Erythrina variegate L. (Fabaceae) in the Eastern Ghats, India - Beiträge zur Biologie der Pflanzen, 73: 321-330.
  • 59. Rambo D.F., Biegelmeyer R., Toson N.S.B., Dresch R.R., Moreno P.R.H., Henriques A.T. 2019 - The genus Erythrina L.: A review on its alkaloids, preclinical, and clinical studies - Phytotherapy Research, 33: 1258-1276.
  • 60. Rathcke B. 1983 - Competition and facilitation among plants for pollination. (In: Pollination biology, Ed: L. Real) - Academic Press, London, pp. 305-329.
  • 61. Regan E.C., Santini L., Ingwall-King L., Hoffmann M., Rondinini C., Symes A., Taylor J., Stuart H.M., Butchart S.H.M. 2015 - Global trends in the status of bird and mammal pollinators - Conservation Letters, 8: 397-403.
  • 62. Rojas-Nossa S.V., Sánchez J.M., Navarro L. 2016 - Nectar robbing: a common phenomenon mainly determined by accessibility constraints, nectar volume and density of energy rewards - Oikos, 125, 7: 1044-1055.
  • 63. Rojas-Nossa S.V., Sánchez J.M., Navarro L. 2021 - Nectar robbing and plant reproduction: an interplay of positive and negative effects - Oikos, 130: 601-608.
  • 64. Safford R.J., Jones C.G. 1998 - Strategies for land-bird conservation on Mauritius - Conservation Biology, 12: 169-176.
  • 65. Schmidt-Lebuhn A.N., Kessler M., Hensen I. 2007 - Hummingbirds as drivers of plant speciation? - Trends in Plant Sciences, 12: 329-331.
  • 66. Shahabuddin G., Goswami R., Krishnadas M., Menon T. 2021 - Decline in forest bird species and guilds due to land use change in the Western Himalaya - Global Ecology and Conservation, 25: e01447.
  • 67. Singh V.K., Barman C., Tandon R. 2014 - Nectar Robbing Positively Influences the Reproductive Success of Tecomella undulata (Bignoniaceae) - PLoS ONE, 9: e102607.
  • 68. Stebbins G.L. 1970 - Adaptive radiation of reproductive characteristics in angiosperms. I: pollination mechanisms - Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1: 307-326.
  • 69. Stiles F.G. 1971 - Time, energy, and territoriality of the Anna hummingbird - Science, 171: 818-821.
  • 70. Tittensor D.P., Walpole M., Hill S.L.L., Ye Y. 2014 - A midterm analysis of progress towards international biodiversity targets - Science, 346: 241-244.
  • 71. Traveset A., Willson M.F., Sabag C. 2002 - Effect of nectar-robbing birds on fruit set of Fuchsia magellanica in Tierra Del Fuego: a disrupted mutualism - Functional Ecology, 12: 459-464.
  • 72. Vázquez D.P., Morris W.F., Jordano P. 2005 - Interaction frequency as a surrogate for the total effect of animal mutualists on plants - Ecology Letters, 8: 1088-1094.
  • 73. Vitali-Veiga M.J., Machado V.L.L. 2000 - Visitantes florais de Erythrina speciosa Andr. (Leguminosae) - Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 17: 369-383.
  • 74. Westerkamp C. 1990 - Bird-flowers: hovering versus perching exploitation - Botanica Acta, 103: 366-371.
  • 75. Zhang F.P., Cai X.H., Wang H., Ren Z.X., Zachary L.R., Li D.Z. 2012 - Dark purple nectar as a foraging signal in a bird-pollinated Himalayan plant - New Phytologist, 193: 188-195.
Uwagi
Opracowanie rekordu ze środków MEiN, umowa nr SONP/SP/546092/2022 w ramach programu "Społeczna odpowiedzialność nauki" - moduł: Popularyzacja nauki i promocja sportu (2022-2023).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-48b01165-2887-40d0-bc24-e368fa939d32
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.