Abstract

Hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are among the most important pollinators, although they attract less attention than bees. They are usually thought to be rather opportunistic flower visitors, although previous studied demonstrated that they show colour preferences and their nectar feeding is affected by morphological constraints related to flower morphology. Despite the growing appreciation of hoverflies and other non-bee insects as pollinators, there is a lack of community-wide studies of flower visitation by syrphids. The aim of this paper is to provide a detailed analysis of flower visitation patterns in a species rich community of syrphids in a Central European grassland and to evaluate how species traits shape the structure of the plant-hoverfly flower visitation network. We found that different species varied in the level of specialisation, and while some species visited a similar spectre of flowers, others partitioned resources more strongly. There was a consistent difference in both specialisation and flower preferences between three syrphid subfamilies. Eristalinae and Pipizinae were more specialised than Syrphinae. Trait-based analyses showed that relative flower visitation (i) increased with plant height, but most strongly in Eristalinae; (ii) increased with inflorescence size in small species from all three subfamilies, but was independent of inflorescence size in large species of Eristalinae and Syrphinae; and (iii) depended on flower colour, but in a subfamily-specific way. Eristalinae showed the strongest flower colour preferences for white flowers, Pipizinae visited mostly white and yellow flowers, while Syrphinae were less affected by flower colour. Exploration of the structure of the plant-hoverfly flower visitation network showed that the network was both modular and nested. We also found that there were almost no differences in specialisation and relative visitation frequency between males and females. Overall, we showed that flower visitation in syrphids was affected by phylogenetic relatedness, body size of syrphids and several plant traits.

Highlights

  • Hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are one of the most abundant groups of flower visiting insects

  • The aim of this paper is to advance our understanding of flower visitation by hoverflies by a thorough analysis of flower visitation in a species-rich community of plants in a Central European grassland

  • Flower visitation by Syrphidae was characterised by a variable degree of specialisation at the species level

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Summary

Introduction

Hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are one of the most abundant groups of flower visiting insects. Hoverflies are important pollinators of many wild plants (Orford, Vaughan & Memmott, 2015; Sakurai & Takahashi, 2017; Moquet et al, 2018), in some cases as important as bees (Forup et al, 2008), and bringing the most pollen grains per visit to flowers of some plant species (King, Ballantyne & Willmer, 2013) They play an important role in pollination of numerous crops (Solomon & Kendall, 1970; Kendall et al, 1971; Ohsawa & Namai, 1987; Ohsawa & Namai, 1988; Jauker & Wolters, 2008; Ssymank et al, 2008; Rader et al, 2009; Inouye et al, 2015; Rader et al, 2016). Our knowledge of their preferences for different flowers and their partitioning of floral resources is still limited

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