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Flower Constancy of Bumblebees – The Case of Onobrychis pindicola (Fabaceae) Pollinators Cover

Flower Constancy of Bumblebees – The Case of Onobrychis pindicola (Fabaceae) Pollinators

Open Access
|Jun 2018

Abstract

Pollination in high mountain habitats is an important ecosystem service in climate change conditions. The aim of this study was to use pollen load analysis to assess flower constancy and foraging choices of bumblebees foraging on Onobrychis pindicola, a high-mountain endemic plant. The flower constancy to the foraging source O. pindicola was very high - over half of the bumblebees had pure Onobrychis-type pollen loads. In the mixed pollen loads we found one to seven pollen types other than Onobrychis-type and the functional flower morphology was different from the flag type. Some were gullet while others were dish/bowl functional morphology type. Thus the theory/belief that once discovering the flag blossom as a foraging resource bumblebees tended to visit other plants with such functional morphology was rejected. An abundance of plants did not determine food choice. We could not trace an obvious pattern of the bumblebees’ preference to functional blossom morphology but they were attracted to dish-bowl blossoms.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jas-2018-0005 | Journal eISSN: 2299-4831 | Journal ISSN: 1643-4439
Language: English
Page range: 135 - 140
Submitted on: Sep 15, 2017
Accepted on: Jan 8, 2018
Published on: Jun 21, 2018
Published by: Research Institute of Horticulture
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2018 Ekaterina Kozuharova, published by Research Institute of Horticulture
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.