Flowers, Nectar and Insect Visits: Evaluating British Plant Species for Pollinator-friendly Gardens |
| |
Authors: | COMBA, LIVIO CORBET, SARAH A. HUNT, LYNN WARREN, BEN |
| |
Affiliation: | Zoology Department, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3JE, UK |
| |
Abstract: | Twenty-four plant species native or naturalized in Britain weregrown in the Cambridge University Botanic Garden, UK and evaluatedas potential resources for nectar-foraging bees, butterfliesand hoverflies. In ten plant species a series of measurementswere made, at regular intervals from dawn to dusk, of nectarsecretion rate and standing crop, and in all species insectvisits were monitored throughout daylight hours. The study revealeddifferences between plant species in the composition of theassemblage of insect visitors, and in the magnitude and temporaldistribution of the nectar reward. In some cases we found interestingcorrelations between temperature and secretion rates or patternsof insect visits. Species that received numerous insect visitsin our study are potentially valuable forage plants that mightbe planted by gardeners to support local pollinator populations.Deep flowers whose nectar is accessible to long-tongued bumblebees(Bombus hortorum, B. pascuorum) but not to honeybees may providelong-tongued pollinators with a resource refuge relatively freefrom honeybee competition. Features that make some of thoseplant species particularly interesting to observe in the gardeninclude robbing by short-tongued bumblebees inSaponaria,baseworkingby honeybees on closed flowers inMalva sylvestris, and apparentdisplacement of bumblebees by territorial behaviour of the solitarybeeAnthidium manicatumon species ofStachys.Copyright 1999 Annalsof Botany Company Wild flowers, gardens, nectar,Silene, Lychnis, Saponaria, Stachys, Malva, Dipsacus fullonum, Lythrum salicaria,pollinators, bumblebees,Bombus,honeybees,Apis,butterflies, Lepidoptera, hoverflies, Syrphidae,Anthidium manicatum, weeds. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect Oxford 等数据库收录! |
|