Abstract

Phenological overlap with pollinators is crucial for reproductive success in insect-pollinated plants. In this study, we examined whether pollinator visitation successfully occurred during an entire flowering season in two populations of the insect-pollinated spring ephemeral Trillium camschatcense in the Tokachi region of Hokkaido, northern Japan. We bagged flowers and excluded pollinator visitation during either the first or the last half of the entire flowering season to compare pollination success between the two periods. The two populations have experienced differing levels of climate warming in the last 60years, which impacted pollinator visitation. In the population experiencing temperature rise more rapidly, fertilization rate and seed set decreased sharply when bagged during the first half period, indicating that pollinator visitation is skewed to the early part of the flowering season. The temporal skewness of pollination success would be an early warning signal of the impacts of climate warming on the reproductive success of T. camschatcense.

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