Abstract

Plant–insect interactions often are important for plant reproduction, but the outcome of these interactions may vary with environmental context. Pollinating seed predators have positive and negative effects on host plant reproduction, and the interaction outcome is predicted to vary with density or abundance of the partners. We studied the interaction between Silene stellata, an herbaceous perennial, and Hadena ectypa, its specialized pollinating seed predator. Silene stellata is only facultatively dependent upon H. ectypa for pollination because other nocturnal moth co-pollinators are equally effective at pollen transfer. We hypothesized that for plants without conspecific neighbors, H. ectypa would have higher visitation rates compared to co-pollinators, and the plants would experience lower levels of H. ectypa pollen deposition. We predicted similar oviposition throughout the study site but greater H. ectypa predation in the area without conspecific neighbors compared to plants embedded in a naturally high density area. We found that H. ectypa had consistently higher visitation than moth co-pollinators in all host plant contexts. However, H. ectypa pollinator importance declined in areas with low conspecific density because of reduced pollen deposition, resulting in lower seed set. Conversely, oviposition was similar across the study site independent of host plant density. Greater likelihood of very high fruit predation combined with lower pollination by H. ectypa resulted in reduced S. stellata female reproductive success in areas with low conspecific density. Our results demonstrate local context dependency of the outcomes of pollinating seed predator interactions with conspecific host plant density within a population.

Highlights

  • Outcomes of interspecific interactions may shift along a continuum from mutualistic to antagonistic, and the context within which the interaction occurs may affect the placement of the interaction along the continuum (Bronstein 1994)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • Co-pollinator visitation was significantly lower than H. ectypa visitation to the HDM and LDW areas, but visitation was similar for H. ectypa and co-pollinators in the LDM area (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Outcomes of interspecific interactions may shift along a continuum from mutualistic to antagonistic, and the context within which the interaction occurs may affect the placement of the interaction along the continuum (Bronstein 1994). Patches of plants that are small or have low conspecific density frequently occur in nature (e.g., during establishment of new populations within or outside the species range or after plant population fragmentation via habitat destruction), and the persistence of these patches is dependent on the successful reproduction of resident plants (Saunders et al 1991; Debinski and Holt 2000; Groom 2001). The outcomes of interspecific interactions that affect plant reproduction (e.g., pollination and herbivory) may be context dependent and affected by host plant density (Root 1973; Kunin 1997; Kearns et al 1998; Aguilar et al 2006).

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