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Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan

Assessment of resource partitioning in pollinators at a particular place can be used to conserve plant communities by minimizing their inter-specific competition. Current study was conducted to investigate the occurrence of this phenomenon among plant communities under sub-tropical conditions for th...

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Autores principales: Sajjad, Asif, Liu, Junhe, Wang, Yusha, Farooqi, Muhammad Aslam, Zhao, Zihua, Ahmad, Ammad, Akram, Waseem, Ali, Mudssar, Ali, Abid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7894816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33606792
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247124
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author Sajjad, Asif
Liu, Junhe
Wang, Yusha
Farooqi, Muhammad Aslam
Zhao, Zihua
Ahmad, Ammad
Akram, Waseem
Ali, Mudssar
Ali, Abid
author_facet Sajjad, Asif
Liu, Junhe
Wang, Yusha
Farooqi, Muhammad Aslam
Zhao, Zihua
Ahmad, Ammad
Akram, Waseem
Ali, Mudssar
Ali, Abid
author_sort Sajjad, Asif
collection PubMed
description Assessment of resource partitioning in pollinators at a particular place can be used to conserve plant communities by minimizing their inter-specific competition. Current study was conducted to investigate the occurrence of this phenomenon among plant communities under sub-tropical conditions for the first time in Pakistan. We considered the entire available flowering plant and floral visitor communities in the study area—Lal Suhanra forest of Bahawalpur, Pakistan- along with different variations among them based on morphology, color and symmetry (functional groups) i.e. four functional groups among insects and nine among plants. Weekly floral visitor censuses were conducted during spring season -from the first week of March to the fourth week of May 2018. Thirty individuals of each plant species -in bloom- were observed for floral visitors in each census. Plant species with different floral shapes, colors and symmetry did not show any significant resource partitioning. The Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis followed by one-way ANOSIM test showed non- significant differences among all the pair of floral shapes, colors (except white and yellow) and symmetry (R-value < 0.168). However, SIMPER test suggested that flies were the most common group that contributed more towards within group similarities of different floral shapes (19 to 21% similarity), colors (16 to 30%) and symmetry (19%) followed by long-tongue bees i.e. 14 to 21%, 9 to 19% and 18%, respectively. Our results suggest that plant communities under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan exhibit a generalist pollination system with no significant resource partitioning in pollinator species. Therefore, plant communities may have high competition for pollinator species which exhibits fewer implications of species loss on overall pollination process. Our study provides the basis for understanding the partitioning of pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions. Future studies should focus on functional traits in more detail at the community and the population scales for their possible impact on resource partitioning.
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spelling pubmed-78948162021-03-01 Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan Sajjad, Asif Liu, Junhe Wang, Yusha Farooqi, Muhammad Aslam Zhao, Zihua Ahmad, Ammad Akram, Waseem Ali, Mudssar Ali, Abid PLoS One Research Article Assessment of resource partitioning in pollinators at a particular place can be used to conserve plant communities by minimizing their inter-specific competition. Current study was conducted to investigate the occurrence of this phenomenon among plant communities under sub-tropical conditions for the first time in Pakistan. We considered the entire available flowering plant and floral visitor communities in the study area—Lal Suhanra forest of Bahawalpur, Pakistan- along with different variations among them based on morphology, color and symmetry (functional groups) i.e. four functional groups among insects and nine among plants. Weekly floral visitor censuses were conducted during spring season -from the first week of March to the fourth week of May 2018. Thirty individuals of each plant species -in bloom- were observed for floral visitors in each census. Plant species with different floral shapes, colors and symmetry did not show any significant resource partitioning. The Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis followed by one-way ANOSIM test showed non- significant differences among all the pair of floral shapes, colors (except white and yellow) and symmetry (R-value < 0.168). However, SIMPER test suggested that flies were the most common group that contributed more towards within group similarities of different floral shapes (19 to 21% similarity), colors (16 to 30%) and symmetry (19%) followed by long-tongue bees i.e. 14 to 21%, 9 to 19% and 18%, respectively. Our results suggest that plant communities under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan exhibit a generalist pollination system with no significant resource partitioning in pollinator species. Therefore, plant communities may have high competition for pollinator species which exhibits fewer implications of species loss on overall pollination process. Our study provides the basis for understanding the partitioning of pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions. Future studies should focus on functional traits in more detail at the community and the population scales for their possible impact on resource partitioning. Public Library of Science 2021-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7894816/ /pubmed/33606792 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247124 Text en © 2021 Sajjad et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sajjad, Asif
Liu, Junhe
Wang, Yusha
Farooqi, Muhammad Aslam
Zhao, Zihua
Ahmad, Ammad
Akram, Waseem
Ali, Mudssar
Ali, Abid
Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title_full Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title_fullStr Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title_short Plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of Pakistan
title_sort plant communities exhibit low resource partitioning for pollinator guilds under sub-tropical conditions of pakistan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7894816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33606792
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247124
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