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Warming, CO2, and nitrogen deposition interactively affect a plant-pollinator mutualism
Authors:Hoover Shelley E R  Ladley Jenny J  Shchepetkina Anastasia A  Tisch Maggie  Gieseg Steven P  Tylianakis Jason M
Institution:School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Abstract:Environmental changes threaten plant-pollinator mutualisms and their critical ecosystem service. Drivers such as land use, invasions and climate change can affect pollinator diversity or species encounter rates. However, nitrogen deposition, climate warming and CO(2) enrichment could interact to disrupt this crucial mutualism by altering plant chemistry in ways that alter floral attractiveness or even nutritional rewards for pollinators. Using a pumpkin model system, we show that these drivers non-additively affect flower morphology, phenology, flower sex ratios and nectar chemistry (sugar and amino acids), thereby altering the attractiveness of nectar to bumble bee pollinators and reducing worker longevity. Alarmingly, bees were attracted to, and consumed more, nectar from a treatment that reduced their survival by 22%. Thus, three of the five major drivers of global environmental change have previously unknown interactive effects on plant-pollinator mutualisms that could not be predicted from studies of individual drivers in isolation.
Keywords:Bombus  bottom‐up  carbon dioxide  Cucurbita  ecosystem service  global change  global warming  higher‐order effects  pollination  species interactions  temperature
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