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Extreme Drought Affects Visitation and Seed Set in a Plant Species in the Central Chilean Andes Heavily Dependent on Hummingbird Pollination

Authors :
Paola Jara-Arancio
Mary T. K. Arroyo
Jaime Martínez-Harms
Jonás Arenas
Ana Copier
Kiara Castro
René D. Garreaud
Valeria Robles
Joaquín Keymer
Ítalo Tamburrino
Patricio Pliscoff
Source :
Plants, Volume 9, Issue 11, Plants, Vol 9, Iss 1553, p 1553 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI, 2020.

Abstract

Rising temperatures and increasing drought in Mediterranean-type climate areas are expected to affect plant&ndash<br />pollinator interactions, especially in plant species with specialised pollination. Central Chile experienced a mega drought between 2010 and 2020 which reached an extreme in the austral summer of 2019&ndash<br />2020. Based on intensive pollinator sampling and floral studies we show that the subalpine form of Mutisia subulata (Asteraceae) is a specialised hummingbird-pollinated species. In a two-year study which included the severest drought year, we quantified visitation frequency, flower-head density, flower-head visitation rates, two measures of floral longevity, nectar characteristics and seed set and monitored climatic variables to detect direct and indirect climate-related effects on pollinator visitation. Flower-head density, nectar standing crop and seed set were significantly reduced in the severest drought year while nectar concentration increased. The best model to explain visitation frequency included flower-head density, relative humidity, temperature, and nectar standing crop with highly significant effects of the first three variables. Results for flower-head density suggest hummingbirds were able to associate visual signals with reduced resource availability and/or were less abundant. The negative effect of lower relative humidity suggests the birds were able to perceive differences in nectar concentration. Reduced seed set per flower-head together with the availability of far fewer ovules in the 2019&ndash<br />2020 austral summer would have resulted in a major reduction in seed set. Longer and more intense droughts in this century could threaten local population persistence in M. subulata.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22237747
Volume :
9
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plants
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56bad2945c4a7701f87fbaaa0ac53730