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Experimental grazer exclusion increases pollination reliability and influences pollinator-mediated plant-plant interactions in tibetan alpine meadows

Bi, Cheng LU ; Opedal, Øystein H. LU ; Yang, Ting ; Yang, Lili ; Gao, Erliang ; Hou, Meng and Zhao, Zhigang (2024) In Alpine Botany
Abstract

1. Co-flowering plant species often interact through shared pollinators, with effects ranging from positive (facilitation) to negative (competition). It remains unclear how this variation relates to variation in floral density, floral trait distinctiveness, and local environmental conditions. We studied the effect of grazer exclusion, a proposed local management strategy, on pollinator-mediated plant-plant interactions in heavily degraded alpine meadows of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. 2. We studied the effect of experimental grazer exclusion on plant reproduction and pollinator-mediated reproductive interactions quantified through pollen transfer networks. We also explored potential mechanisms of pollinator-mediated interspecific pollen... (More)

1. Co-flowering plant species often interact through shared pollinators, with effects ranging from positive (facilitation) to negative (competition). It remains unclear how this variation relates to variation in floral density, floral trait distinctiveness, and local environmental conditions. We studied the effect of grazer exclusion, a proposed local management strategy, on pollinator-mediated plant-plant interactions in heavily degraded alpine meadows of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. 2. We studied the effect of experimental grazer exclusion on plant reproduction and pollinator-mediated reproductive interactions quantified through pollen transfer networks. We also explored potential mechanisms of pollinator-mediated interspecific pollen transfer and its effect on plant reproductive fitness, including local floral abundance and floral trait distinctiveness among co-flowering species. 3. Grazer exclusion led to greater pollen deposition onto stigmas. The overall quantitative effects of pollinator-mediated interspecific interactions on the receptor species were mainly positive (facilitative) or neutral (with no detectable effect). The frequency of positive relative to negative quantitative effects for pairwise donor-receptor pairs tended to increase after grazer exclusion. Plants with floral traits similar to those of local ‘hub species’ appeared to benefit from pollinator-mediated interactions. 4. Our results suggest an overall positive effect of excluding grazers during the plant growing season on plant reproduction. Facilitative species interactions predominate in harsh environments such as the alpine, and the benefits of pollinator-mediated interactions among plants seemed to exceed the cost of conspecific pollen loss associated with pollinator sharing. This suggest that species invasions into alpine plant communities, an expected consequence of climate change, may not necessarily have negative effects on the reproduction of resident plant species.

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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Biodiversity conservation, Facilitation, Grazing, Plant reproductive fitness, Plant-plant interactions, Pollen transfer network
in
Alpine Botany
publisher
Birkhäuser Verlag
external identifiers
  • scopus:85192559555
ISSN
1664-2201
DOI
10.1007/s00035-024-00311-1
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9698d6a8-710a-4f05-80d5-2672f8026124
date added to LUP
2024-05-30 15:07:00
date last changed
2024-06-03 17:29:29
@article{9698d6a8-710a-4f05-80d5-2672f8026124,
  abstract     = {{<p>1. Co-flowering plant species often interact through shared pollinators, with effects ranging from positive (facilitation) to negative (competition). It remains unclear how this variation relates to variation in floral density, floral trait distinctiveness, and local environmental conditions. We studied the effect of grazer exclusion, a proposed local management strategy, on pollinator-mediated plant-plant interactions in heavily degraded alpine meadows of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. 2. We studied the effect of experimental grazer exclusion on plant reproduction and pollinator-mediated reproductive interactions quantified through pollen transfer networks. We also explored potential mechanisms of pollinator-mediated interspecific pollen transfer and its effect on plant reproductive fitness, including local floral abundance and floral trait distinctiveness among co-flowering species. 3. Grazer exclusion led to greater pollen deposition onto stigmas. The overall quantitative effects of pollinator-mediated interspecific interactions on the receptor species were mainly positive (facilitative) or neutral (with no detectable effect). The frequency of positive relative to negative quantitative effects for pairwise donor-receptor pairs tended to increase after grazer exclusion. Plants with floral traits similar to those of local ‘hub species’ appeared to benefit from pollinator-mediated interactions. 4. Our results suggest an overall positive effect of excluding grazers during the plant growing season on plant reproduction. Facilitative species interactions predominate in harsh environments such as the alpine, and the benefits of pollinator-mediated interactions among plants seemed to exceed the cost of conspecific pollen loss associated with pollinator sharing. This suggest that species invasions into alpine plant communities, an expected consequence of climate change, may not necessarily have negative effects on the reproduction of resident plant species.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bi, Cheng and Opedal, Øystein H. and Yang, Ting and Yang, Lili and Gao, Erliang and Hou, Meng and Zhao, Zhigang}},
  issn         = {{1664-2201}},
  keywords     = {{Biodiversity conservation; Facilitation; Grazing; Plant reproductive fitness; Plant-plant interactions; Pollen transfer network}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Birkhäuser Verlag}},
  series       = {{Alpine Botany}},
  title        = {{Experimental grazer exclusion increases pollination reliability and influences pollinator-mediated plant-plant interactions in tibetan alpine meadows}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00035-024-00311-1}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s00035-024-00311-1}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}