Abstract

Global pollinator decline is a major concern. Several factors—climate change, land-use change, the reduction of flowers, pesticide use, and invasive species—have been suggested as the reasons. Despite being a potential reason, the effect of ants on flowers received less attention. The consequences of ants being attracted to nectar sources in plants vary depending upon factors like the nectar source's position, ants' identity, and other mutualists interacting with the plants. We studied the interaction between flower-visiting ants and pollinators in Cucurbita maxima and compared the competition exerted by native and invasive ants on its pollinators to examine the hypothesis that the invasive ants exacerbate more interference competition to pollinators than the native ants. We assessed the pollinator's choice, visitation rate, and time spent/visit on the flowers. Regardless of species and nativity, ants negatively influenced all the pollinator visitation traits, such as visitation rate and duration spent on flowers. The invasive ants exerted a higher interference competition on the pollinators than the native ants did. Despite performing pollination in flowers with generalist pollination syndrome, ants can threaten plant-pollinator mutualism in specialist plants like monoecious plants. A better understanding of factors influencing pollination will help in implementing better management practices.

Highlights

  • Global pollinator decline is a major concern

  • We studied the effect of flower type on visitation rate and the time the pollinators spent in flowers using two generalized linear models with negative binomial distribution as an error type, flower type and flower sex as the fixed effects and visitation rate and time spent by the bees as the response variables

  • We studied the interactive effects of ant type, number of ants and flower sex on a) visitation rate and b) the time the pollinators spent on ant-occupied flowers using two Generalized Linear Mixed Effect Model (GLMM)

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Summary

Introduction

Global pollinator decline is a major concern. Several factors—climate change, land-use change, the reduction of flowers, pesticide use, and invasive species—have been suggested as the reasons. Regardless of species and nativity, ants negatively influenced all the pollinator visitation traits, such as visitation rate and duration spent on flowers. One of the most successful taxa that invaded islands, mainland, and continents worldwide is ­ants[5] Their sociality and colony structure backing their success cause widespread damage in the introduced a­ rea[6]. They are known to crash the populations of native ants, other invertebrates, reptiles, birds, and mammals in invaded ­sites[6,7]. Invasive ants participate and disrupt a range of plant-animal interactions as w­ ell[9,10].

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