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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Experimental Plant Density Reductions on Plant Choice and Foraging Behaviour of Bees (Hymenoptera:Apoidea)

Mats W. Pettersson, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 1, pp 40-46
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TLDR
The results showed that bees still chose and utilized plant species with a small number of open flowers in the density-reduced plots, and in plantspecies with a larger number of flowers, bees often chose the dense plots or did not visit as many flowers on plants in thedensity-red reduced plots.
Abstract
This investigation tested how a reduction in plant density affected the willingness of bees to visit a number of palaearctic plant species. Pairwise comparisons were made between the first bee visits to control and manipulated plots. The results showed that bees still chose and utilized plant species with a small number of open flowers in the density-reduced plots. In plant species with a larger number of flowers, bees often chose the dense plots or did not visit as many flowers on plants in the density-reduced plots. Multiflowered plants may produce only small amounts of nectar in order to discourage pollinators from foraging too long in the inflorescences. This would result in a decrease in the number of self-pollination events and an increase in pollen export.

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Citations
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The effect of patch size and separation on bumblebee foraging in oilseed rape: implications for gene flow

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that susceptibility to pollinator-mediated gene flow is liable to decrease systematically as the size of plant patches increases, which can inform the management of genetic diversity in and among small or fragmented populations.
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Pollinator behavioural responses to grazing intensity

TL;DR: It is suggested that studies of insect behaviour may be a useful tool when deciding on management recommendations and late grazing is recommended as a useful management regime and might potentially function as a substitute for mowing in the future.
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Evaluating contemporary pollen dispersal in two common grassland species Ranunculus bulbosus L. (Ranunculaceae) and Trifolium montanum L. (Fabaceae) using an experimental approach

TL;DR: Patterns of pollen dispersal were directly estimated and dispersal kernels modelled in an experimental population of Ranunculus bulbosus and Trifolium montanum to determine the potential for LDD and suggested that pollen flow may be sufficient to ensure population connectivity in these herb species across fragmented grasslands in Swiss agricultural landscapes.
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Extensive contemporary pollen-mediated gene flow in two herb species, Ranunculus bulbosus and Trifolium montanum, along an altitudinal gradient in a meadow landscape.

TL;DR: The authors' data suggest contemporary pollen flow is not limited across altitudes in either species but is more pronounced in T. montanum, as indicated by the differential decay of among-sibships correlated paternity with increasing spatial distance.
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Experimental evidence for frequency dependent self‐fertilization in the gynodioecious plant, silene vulgaris

TL;DR: It is argued that incorporation of context dependent inbreeding into future models of the evolution of gynodioecy is likely to yield novel insights into sex ratio evolution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal foraging, the marginal value theorem.

TL;DR: This paper will develop a model for the use of a “patchy habitat” by an optimal predator and depresses the availability of food to itself so that the amount of food gained for time spent in a patch of type i is hi(T), where the function rises to an asymptote.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mating cost of large floral displays in hermaphrodite plants

TL;DR: Traditional interpretations of floral design and display are proposed to recognize their roles in reducing geitonogamous pollen discounting, which is observed to predict higher selfing and lower outcrossed siring success for larger inflorescences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex and the single mustard : population density and pollinator behavior effects on seed-set

William E. Kunin
- 01 Oct 1993 - 
TL;DR: The most dramatic density effects occurred where pollinators were induced to behave as generalists, suggesting that density—related declines in pollinator quality are more important than parallel declines in the quantity of visits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Animal Behavior as a Strategy Optimizer: Evolution of Resource Assessment Strategies and Optimal Emigration Thresholds

TL;DR: Models are proposed which examine emigration thresholds from resource patches encountered within a given search strategy and the departure rate can be defined for several situations; there is strong evidence that such strategies exist in natural populations.
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