Abstract

One of the most invoked mechanisms mediating the positive effect of pollinator diversity on plant reproduction is pollinator's niche complementarity (i.e. partitioning of resource use by different pollinator species). However, the influence of spatial and temporal pollinator's niche complementarity on crop pollination function is rarely tested. We investigated the influence of spatial and temporal niche complementary in explaining sunflower crop production by comparing pollination activity at the edge and centre of crop fields and over the day. We found weaker evidence for spatial niche complementarity than for temporal niche complementarity in pollinator visitation rates. Only the visitation rate of hoverflies slightly differed between the centre and the edge of the fields. Nevertheless, we observed no differences in seed weight between the edge and the centre of the fields, but interestingly, plants allowed to be pollinated only by small-sized pollinators experienced a decline in seed production with distance from the edge. Pollinators did show complementary peak activity periods throughout the day, with Bombus terrestris and honeybees preferring to forage early in the day and at cooler temperatures than B. lapidarius and solitary bees. Unexpectedly, only morning- and only afternoon-pollinated plants produced similar seed weights, but these were higher than in all-day exposed plants. These findings indicate that sunflower fields shelter a small number of complementary pollinator species groups, which become rapidly redundant as diversity increases. Overall, we show that temporal and spatial niche complementarity effects on yield can unfold in unexpected ways, which are hard to predict without testing for the specific mechanisms.

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