Abstract
SummaryThe amount of nectar accumulating in inflorescences of defoliated and intact shoots of fireweed from which pollinators were excluded for a 14- to 16-h period was assayed by timing the visits of bees and recording the numbers of flowers visited. The day following a defoliation of c. 80% of leaf area, there was a 42% reduction in the mean time spent per flower by bees, relative to undamaged controls. No further reductions were evident, 2, 3 or 5 days postdefoliation; defoliated shoots maintained a nectar secretion rate of c. 58% that of controls. Although under normal circumstances most photosynthate for nectar secretion is provided by adjacent leaves, these results suggest that the sink effect of open flowers is sufficient to mobilize the translocation of photosynthate from distant plant pans. Defoliated plants did not significantly reduce the numbers of flowers open until day 3 postdefoliation, and even then, there were no differences in the numbers of flowers visited by bees. Parallel fluctuations...
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