传粉者
互惠主义(生物学)
授粉
通才与专种
生物
觅食
生态学
气候变化
生物多样性
栖息地
花粉
作者
Nicole E. Miller‐Struttmann,Jennifer C. Geib,James D. Franklin,Peter G. Kevan,Ricardo M. Holdø,Diane Ebert‐May,Austin M. Lynn,Jessica A. Kettenbach,Elizabeth Hedrick,Candace Galen
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2015-09-24
卷期号:349 (6255): 1541-1544
被引量:220
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.aab0868
摘要
Ecological partnerships, or mutualisms, are globally widespread, sustaining agriculture and biodiversity. Mutualisms evolve through the matching of functional traits between partners, such as tongue length of pollinators and flower tube depth of plants. Long-tongued pollinators specialize on flowers with deep corolla tubes, whereas shorter-tongued pollinators generalize across tube lengths. Losses of functional guilds because of shifts in global climate may disrupt mutualisms and threaten partner species. We found that in two alpine bumble bee species, decreases in tongue length have evolved over 40 years. Co-occurring flowers have not become shallower, nor are small-flowered plants more prolific. We argue that declining floral resources because of warmer summers have favored generalist foraging, leading to a mismatch between shorter-tongued bees and the longer-tubed plants they once pollinated.
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