Artículos de revistas
Floral visitors and pollination of Psychotria tenuinervis (Rubiaceae): Distance from the anthropogenic and natural edges of an Atlantic forest fragment
Registro en:
Biotropica. Blackwell Publishing, v. 38, n. 3, n. 383, n. 389, 2006.
0006-3606
WOS:000236766500013
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00152.x
Autor
Ramos, FN
Santos, FAM
Institución
Resumen
Pollinators, especially insects, could be influenced by forest fragmentation. The aim of this paper was to examine whether there were differences in 1) the communities of floral visitors; 2) the frequency of visits; and 3) the fruit and seed sets of individuals of Psychotria tenuinervis occurring at anthropogenic edges (AEs), natural edges (NEs), and in the forest interior (FI) in 2 yr of study. In 2002, the total number of flower visits was greater in NE and lower in AE, while no difference among habitats was found in 2003. There were differences among sample plots, within habitats, in both years. Bees were the most frequent visitors of P. tenuinervis flowers, and the introduced honeybee Apis mellifera was the most common species observed. There were no differences in the fruit and seed sets, or in the density of reproductive individuals of P. tenuinervis among habitats. However, in 2002, NE showed the greatest proportion of fruits per flower and AE the smallest. The similarity among the habitats was probably due to the marked variation or heterogeneity among the sample plots and among the plants within the habitats, which may have masked any interhabitat differences. The observed heterogeneity and the likely importance of other factors, such as gaps and the age of the edge, on the fragment studied, could be viewed as important issues for conservation programs. 38 3 383 389