Abstract
AbstractA non‐systemic Insecticide was used to exclude flower and seed predators from Banksia ericifolia and B. oblongifolia Inflorescenses. In B. ericifolia this treatment doubled the number of inflorescences that set seeds, and increased by 40% the number of seeds produced per Inflorescence. Insecticide treatment did not alter either of these components of seed‐set in B. oblongifolia partly because the experiment began too late to exclude flower predators In this species. The results obtained for B. ericifolia support the hypothesis that flower and seed predators explain, in part, the low incidence of seed‐bearing cones and the low seed:flower ratios reported for many Banksia species.Each Banksia species supports two guilds of Inflorescence predators. Two Lepidopteran species feed on young flowers; one of these causes tunnel damage to the rachis. Each Banksia species also supports five Lepidopteran and two Curcullonid seed‐predators. About 40% of these herbivorous Insects are common to both shrubs.
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