Abstract

Sympatric plant species can compete for pollination services in several ways. For example, pollinators may move between species and deposit heterospecific pollen on stigmas, which in turn may reduce the efficacy of conspecific pollen. We explored this possibility by determining the effect of Delphinium nelsonii pollen on seed set in Ipomopsis aggregata. These montane herbs are pollinated by hummingbirds, experience heterospecific pollen deposition in nature, and suffer reduced seed set in each other's presence. We hand-pollinated flowers of I. aggregata with either pure conspecific pollen or a mixture of pollen of the two species. Resulting pollen loads on stigmas ranged from 0–865 D. nelsonii grains and from 10–336 I. aggregata grains; mean seed set per flower was 11.3. There was no detectable effect of D. nelsonii pollen load on I. aggregata seed set. It is possible that seed set reductions seen in previous studies of competition for pollination between these species were caused by pollen wastage, pollen layering on the pollinator, or the temporal sequence of pollen arrival at the stigma.

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