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Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld

A range of fairly common plants were investigated in Darling in the Western Cape, to determine their pollinator syndromes, and to evaluate the relative importance of monkey beetles (Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae: Hopliini) and relatively short-tongued horseflies (Tabanidae) in their pollination. Detailed...

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Main Author: Goldberg, Karen
Other Authors: Picker, Michael D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Goldberg, Karen
author2 Picker, Michael D
author_browse Goldberg, Karen
Picker, Michael D
author_facet Picker, Michael D
Goldberg, Karen
author_sort Goldberg, Karen
collection Thesis
description A range of fairly common plants were investigated in Darling in the Western Cape, to determine their pollinator syndromes, and to evaluate the relative importance of monkey beetles (Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae: Hopliini) and relatively short-tongued horseflies (Tabanidae) in their pollination. Detailed observations showed that all the plants investigated are visited by more than one insect species. Visitation rates and pollen loads of all insects found on the plants were used to assess their pollination efficiency. For all plants investigated, only a subset of the visitor-suite was found to contribute to the plant's reproductive success. Geissorhiza radians (Thunb.) Goldblatt and Wachendorfia paniculata L. seem to have specialized pollinator systems, both relying on tabanids for their pollination, while Heliophila coronipifolia, L. Monsonia speciosa, L.f. Ornothogalum thyrsoides, Jacq. Romulea hirsuta (Klatt) Baker and Ursinia anthemoides (L.) Poir. appear to have more generalized pollinator syndromes. Monkey beetles were the predominant and generally the most efficient pollinators for all these species. It is therefore concluded that these two insect groups are important pollinators of the plants investigated and probably play a part in the pollination of several other plants in the community. An evaluation of the larval requirements of pollinators revealed that although some species show clear patterns in terms of what types of soil conditions they prefer, successful emergence of insect species is generally not limited by a shortage of suitable habitats. Environmental variability may therefore play the largest role in determining the emergence and abundance of pollinators. This has implications for plants reliant on insects for their pollination, especially for species with specialized pollinator syndromes. Fluctuations in the environment may be a partial explanation for the prevalence of the generalized pollination syndromes observed.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:57.504Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26773 Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld Goldberg, Karen Picker, Michael D Cowling, Richard M Botany pollination syndromes A range of fairly common plants were investigated in Darling in the Western Cape, to determine their pollinator syndromes, and to evaluate the relative importance of monkey beetles (Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae: Hopliini) and relatively short-tongued horseflies (Tabanidae) in their pollination. Detailed observations showed that all the plants investigated are visited by more than one insect species. Visitation rates and pollen loads of all insects found on the plants were used to assess their pollination efficiency. For all plants investigated, only a subset of the visitor-suite was found to contribute to the plant's reproductive success. Geissorhiza radians (Thunb.) Goldblatt and Wachendorfia paniculata L. seem to have specialized pollinator systems, both relying on tabanids for their pollination, while Heliophila coronipifolia, L. Monsonia speciosa, L.f. Ornothogalum thyrsoides, Jacq. Romulea hirsuta (Klatt) Baker and Ursinia anthemoides (L.) Poir. appear to have more generalized pollinator syndromes. Monkey beetles were the predominant and generally the most efficient pollinators for all these species. It is therefore concluded that these two insect groups are important pollinators of the plants investigated and probably play a part in the pollination of several other plants in the community. An evaluation of the larval requirements of pollinators revealed that although some species show clear patterns in terms of what types of soil conditions they prefer, successful emergence of insect species is generally not limited by a shortage of suitable habitats. Environmental variability may therefore play the largest role in determining the emergence and abundance of pollinators. This has implications for plants reliant on insects for their pollination, especially for species with specialized pollinator syndromes. Fluctuations in the environment may be a partial explanation for the prevalence of the generalized pollination syndromes observed. 2018-01-09T09:00:28Z 2018-01-09T09:00:28Z 1996 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26773 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
pollination syndromes
Goldberg, Karen
Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
title_full Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
title_fullStr Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
title_full_unstemmed Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
title_short Neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated Renosterveld
title_sort neglected pollinator syndromes in seasonally inundated renosterveld
topic Botany
pollination syndromes
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26773
work_keys_str_mv AT goldbergkaren neglectedpollinatorsyndromesinseasonallyinundatedrenosterveld