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Humidity, nectar and insect visits to flowers, with special reference to Crataegus, Tilia and Echium
Authors:SARAH A. CORBET,D. M. UNWIN,OLIVER E. PR&#  S-JONES
Affiliation:Departments of Applied Biology, Zoology, and Applied Biology, University of Cambridge
Abstract:Abstract. 1. This paper describes field observations on diel changes in the nectars of Crataegus, Tilia and Echium in relation to microclimate and insect visits.
2. Nectar concentration is highly correlated with ambient relative humidity, but the concentrative properties of the nectars differ from those of pure sugar solutions in ways that could be accounted for by microclimate or chemical effects.
3. The microclimate inside flowers may influence the rate of equilibration of nectar with the relative humidity of the air, or the equilibrium concentration itself.
4. The vapour pressure relationships of nectars may be influenced by the presence of components with low r/P values (that is, solutes in which solution show a relatively large lowering of vapour pressure, P , for a small change in refraction, r ). Such components might be released by micro-organisms in the nectar.
5. The quantity of sugar per flower depends on the relative rates of secretion and reabsorption, among other things. The flowers we studied showed evidence for morning and evening peaks of secretion, and in Crataegus substantial quantities of sugar were 'sequestered' around midday.
6. The pattern of visits by bumblebees to the flowers of Tilia and Echium can be related to the changing concentration of sugar in the nectar; caloric reward was probably not limiting for bumblebees visiting Tilia.
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