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Journal ArticleDOI

Early onset of spring increases the phenological mismatch between plants and pollinators

Gaku Kudo, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
- Vol. 94, Iss: 10, pp 2311-2320
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TLDR
The mechanism of phenological mismatch and its ecological impact on plant-pollinator interactions based on long-term monitoring demonstrates the mechanism of mismatch can decrease seed production and may affect the population dynamics of spring ephemerals.
Abstract
Climate warming accelerates the timing of flowering and insect pollinator emergence, especially in spring. If these phenological shifts progress independently between species, features of plant-pollinator mutualisms may be modified. However, evidence of phenological mismatch in pollination systems is limited. We investigated the phenologies of a spring ephemeral, Corydalis ambigua, and its pollinators (bumble bees), and seed-set success over 10-14 years in three populations. Although both flowering onset and first detection of overwintered queen bees in the C. ambigua populations were closely related to snowmelt time and/or spring temperature, flowering tended to be ahead of first pollinator detection when spring came early, resulting in lower seed production owing to low pollination service. Relationships between flowering onset time, phenological mismatch, and seed-set success strongly suggest that phenological mismatch is a major limiting factor for reproduction of spring ephemerals. This report demonstrates the mechanism of phenological mismatch and its ecological impact on plant-pollinator interactions based on long-term monitoring. Frequent occurrence of mismatch can decrease seed production and may affect the population dynamics of spring ephemerals.

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Citations
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Posted ContentDOI

Phenological displacement is uncommon among sympatric angiosperms

TL;DR: This work applies data from tens of thousands of herbarium specimens to examine character displacement in flowering time across 110 animal-pollinated angiosperm species in the eastern USA, and demonstrates that the degree and direction of phenological displacement among co-occurring closely related species pairs varies tremendously.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global analysis of floral longevity reveals latitudinal gradients and biotic and abiotic correlates.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors present the first global quantification of the latitudinal pattern of floral longevity and the relationships between the length of time a flower remains open and functional and a range of biotic and abiotic factors.
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Climate warming shortens flowering duration: a comprehensive assessment of plant phenological responses based on gene expression analyses and mathematical modeling

TL;DR: The study suggested that the redundancy of flowering gene regulatory network could be beneficial to the persistence of flowering ability under extreme climatic conditions.
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High Levels of Phenological Asynchrony Between Specialized Pollinators and Plants with Short Flowering Phases

TL;DR: This work quantified the level of phenological synchrony in plant-pollinator networks in Costa Rica and tested the relationship between pollinator specialization and the length of the flowering phase of the visited plants, finding that more specialized pollinators were more asynchronous with their plant partners.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in flowering phenology of Cardamine concatenata and Erythronium americanum over 111 years in the Central Appalachians

TL;DR: This research demonstrates the plasticity of phenological response to a variety of climatic variables, the usefulness of using herbarium specimens to reconstruct flowering dates over a topographically variable area, and the contrasting effects of climate change on high elevation regions of West Virginia.
References
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Journal Article

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R Core Team
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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