info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The southernmost parakeet might be enhancing pollination of a dioecious conifer
Fecha
2017-11Registro en:
Gleiser, Gabriela Laura; Lambertucci, Sergio Agustin; Speziale, Karina Lilian; Hiraldo, Fernando; Tella Escobedo, José Luis; et al.; The southernmost parakeet might be enhancing pollination of a dioecious conifer; Ecological Society of America; Ecology; 98; 11; 11-2017; 2969-2971
0012-9658
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Gleiser, Gabriela Laura
Lambertucci, Sergio Agustin
Speziale, Karina Lilian
Hiraldo, Fernando
Tella Escobedo, José Luis
Aizen, Marcelo Adrian
Resumen
The endangered monkey puzzle tree, Araucaria araucana, is a dioecious conifer that, throughout its native range in northwest Patagonia (Argentina and Chile), holds sex-specific interactions with the southernmost parrot in the world, the austral parakeet Enicognathus ferrugineus. This parakeet is known to be an important consumer and disperser of A. araucana’s seeds (Tella et al. 2016). During the pollination season, we observed parakeets feeding massively on A. araucana’s pollen-loaded male cones (Fig. 1a). With their bodies and feet bathed in pollen (Video S1) parakeets often flew to female trees, perching on receptive female cones, which they did not consume at that developing stage (Fig. 1b). This feeding behavior, based on consumption of male cones releasing pollen but not of young female cones with receptive ovules, could promote parrot-mediated pollination in an otherwise wind-pollinated conifer. Parrot-mediated pollination could be potentially common across A. araucana’s geographic range. Beyond D ıaz et al. (2012)’s first record of consumption of A. araucana’s pollen by parakeets in one Argentinian population, we observed parakeets feeding on pollen (groups of up to 150 individuals) and then perching on young female cones in five other Argentinian and two Chilean populations during two pollination seasons (November–December 2013 and 2015).