Abstract

To determine the effects of flowering season on the community structure and dynamics of flower visitors, I examined annual and hourly variation in flower-visiting insects on two Rhododendron species in a deciduous secondary forest in central Japan. Rhododendron reticulatum flowers from late March to mid-April, whereas R. macrosepalum flowers from late April to late May. Bagged and hand-pollination experiments indicated that outcrossing by flower visitors was important for the pollination of both R. reticulatum and R. macrosepalum. Pollinator and pollen limitation were detected in both Rhododendron species, although the extent of both differed between the two species. The flowers of both Rhododendron species were visited by insects of diverse taxa, including Hymenoptera, Diptera and Lepidoptera. The composition of flower visitors differed between R. reticulatum and R. macrosepalum, although a few species visited both of them. The beefly Bombyliusmajor (Diptera: Bombyliidae) most frequently visited R. reticulatum, whereas the bumblebee Bombusardensardens (Hymenoptera: Apidae) most frequently visited R. macrosepalum. Hourly changes in the number of flower visitors also differed between R. reticulatum and R. macrosepalum; insects visited R. reticulatum flowers less frequently in the morning than in the afternoon, whereas insect visitations to R. macrosepalum flowers did not differ between morning and afternoon. Differences in both insect community structure and hourly changes of visitations between the two Rhododendron species occurred annually and may be related to the life history of the abundant visitor species as well as flowering phenology.

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