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Nectar-stealing bees drain tubular flowers but leave seed production unharmed

Valdivia CE, Orellana JI.

Pollinators

Next time you spot a bumblebee hovering at the base of a tubular flower instead of its mouth, you're watching a nectar robber at work, and this research says the plant is likely shrugging it off.

Some bees are too small to reach nectar the normal way, so they bite a hole near the base of a flower and steal it without picking up any pollen. Researchers expected this to hurt the plant's ability to make seeds, but it didn't. As long as hummingbirds kept visiting and carrying pollen between flowers, the plant produced normal amounts of seeds even when robbers had drained the nectar.

Key Findings

1

Pierced flowers held roughly 9 times less nectar than intact flowers, showing primary nectar robbers severely deplete floral rewards.

2

Seed production per flower was statistically identical whether nectar robbers were present or absent, provided legitimate pollinators (hummingbirds) had access.

3

Bumblebees visited more flowers per plant while robbing than during legitimate pollination, a foraging-mode difference rather than a demonstrated causal effect of robbing on behavior.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Bumblebees that chew holes in flowers to steal nectar dramatically cut floral nectar reserves in a Chilean shrub, yet the plant still produces just as many seeds, because hummingbirds reliably deliver pollen regardless of the theft.

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Abstract Preview

Original paper

Nectar Robbery by Native and Invasive Bumblebees Reduces Floral Rewards but Not Seed Production in <i>Desfontainia fulgens</i>.

Nectar robbery is common in hummingbird-pollinated plants and is often assumed to reduce plant reproductive success by depleting floral rewards and disrupting pollination. However, its quantitative...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — Desfontainia fulgens pollinators, invasive-species, native-plants +1 more 5 related articles

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