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Minimal Effects of an Invasive Flowering Shrub on the Pollinator Community of Native Forbs
Authors:Y. Anny Chung  Laura A. Burkle  Tiffany M. Knight
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America.; 2. Department of Biology, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.; 3. Department of Ecology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United States of America.; University of New South Wales, Australia,
Abstract:Biological invasions can strongly influence species interactions such as pollination. Most of the documented effects of exotic plant species on plant-pollinator interactions have been observational studies using single pairs of native and exotic plants, and have focused on dominant exotic plant species. We know little about how exotic plants alter interactions in entire communities of plants and pollinators, especially at low to medium invader densities. In this study, we began to address these gaps by experimentally removing the flowers of a showy invasive shrub, Rosa multiflora, and evaluating its effects on the frequency, richness, and composition of bee visitors to co-flowering native plants. We found that while R. multiflora increased plot-level richness of bee visitors to co-flowering native plant species at some sites, its presence had no significant effects on bee visitation rate, visitor richness, bee community composition, or abundance overall. In addition, we found that compared to co-flowering natives, R. multiflora was a generalist plant that primarily received visits from generalist bee species shared with native plant species. Our results suggest that exotic plants such as R. multiflora may facilitate native plant pollination in a community context by attracting a more diverse assemblage of pollinators, but have limited and idiosyncratic effects on the resident plant-pollinator network in general.
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