Lizards, mice, bats and other vertebrates are important pollinators too

Study reviews the global importance of vertebrate pollinators for plant reproduction

Wednesday, 4 April 2018
For Immediate Release

Contact: Liza Lester, 202-833-8773 ext. 211, gro.asenull@retseLL

Pollen dusts the nose of a Namaqua rock mouse (Aethomys namaquensis) as it samples nectar from a pagoda lily (Whiteheadia biflia) on the Sevilla Rock Art Trail in South Africa. The rock mice visit lilies in the night, sipping from, but not eating, the flowers, and carrying pollen from flower to flower. Beyond bats, which pollinate about 528 plant species, flightless mammals like lemurs, possums, squirrels, and marsupials are also known to visit at least 85 plant species. Photo courtesy of Petra Wester.

Bees are not the only animals that carry pollen from flower to flower. Species with backbones, among them bats, birds, mice, and even lizards, also serve as pollinators. Although less familiar as flower visitors than insect pollinators, vertebrate pollinators are more likely to have co-evolved tight relationships of high value to the plants they service, supplying essential reproductive aid for which few or no other species may substitute.

In plants known to receive flower visitations from vertebrates, fruit and seed production drops 63 percent, on average, when the larger animals, but not insects, are experimentally blocked from accessing the plants, ecologists report in the March cover study for the Ecological Society of America’s journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

A bluetail day gecko (Phelsuma cepediana) dips into the nectar of a male-phase Roussea simplex flower, picking up a crown of pollen that it will transport to another flower. The gecko provides the only means of pollination for the critically endangered R. simplex, an unusual climbing shrub that is the only living species of its family, and, like the gecko, lives only on the island of Mauritius, 900 kilometers east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. A non-native, invasive species to Mauritius, the white-footed ant Technomyrmex albipes also dines on R. simplex nectar and fruit, sometimes blocking the opening of the flower with dirt to create a safe stable for mealybugs, which the ant tends in exchange for a sugary secretion of honeydew. The aggressively competitive ants chase off the geckos, resulting in greatly reduced seed set in ant-infested R. simplex plants. Photo courtesy of Dennis Hansen, Zoological Museum & Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich.

Fabrizia Ratto and colleagues reviewed 126 such animal exclusion experiments to get an idea of how dependent wild plants are on animals with backbones for reproduction. The researchers selected published studies that quantified pollination through the subsequent growth of fruit or seeds.

The exclusion of bat pollinators had a particularly strong effect on their plant consorts, reducing fruit production by 83 percent, on average. Bats pollinate about 528 plant species worldwide, including crops like dragon fruit, African locust beans, and durian, Southeast Asia’s “King of Fruits.” The authors speculate that chiropterophilous, or bat-pollinated, plants are unusually dependent on just a few, related species to carry their pollen.

Many bat species have coevolved intimate interdependencies with the plants that feed them in exchange for pollen transport. Among them, blue agave (Agave tequilana), the source of tequila, depends entirely on the greater (Leptonycteris nivalis) and lesser (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae) long-nosed bats. The cacti open their long, narrow flowers only at night, luring in the bats with the fragrance of rotten fruit. Both bat species are endangered or near threatened.

Face down in a flower of an organ pipe cactus (Stenocereus thurberi), a lesser long-nosed bat (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae) extends its long, specialized tongue to dip up nectar, coating its face in pollen. Bats pollinate about 528 plant species worldwide. The loss of bats has a particularly strong effect on the plants these flying mammals pollinate, reducing fruit production by 83 percent, on average. The lesser long-nosed bat subsists on nectar and pollen from agave species, and also enjoys the fruit from several cacti. Each summer, long-nosed bats make a long migration from Central America to southern New Mexico, Arizona, and Sonora, where they provide essential pollination services for the saguaro (Cereus giganteus), the tall, iconic cactus of the southwestern United States. The bat, in turn, depends on the choreographed timing of flowering and fruiting to fuel its migration. Destruction of roosts and shrinking habitat have put the lesser long-nosed bat on the Endangered Species List. Photo courtesy of C. Guzmán.

Loss of pollination by vertebrates had a higher impact in the tropics, where the study found a 71 percent decline in fruit or seed production. This higher impact may reflect the higher degree of customization for specific pollinators, the authors say. Like the agave cacti, specialized plants that rely on a small number of species of animal helpers for their reproductive success are more vulnerable to disruption.

Non-flying mammals are also pollinators, visiting at least 85 plant species worldwide. Ruffed lemurs (Varecia variegata) may be the largest pollinators, known to pry open the tough flowers of the traveler’s tree (Ravenala madagascariensis)  for a nectar treat on their native island of Madagascar. The lemurs, which rely on the nectar for many of their calories, leave the flowers intact and carry pollen on their fur. Possums and squirrels also pollinate plants. Because empirical studies have only been conducted with species of mice, Ratto and colleagues’ analysis cannot give a picture of the importance of non-flying mammal species for plant reproduction.

Over 920 bird species pollinate plants, forming the largest contingent of the vertebrate pollinators and pollinating about 5 percent of plant species in most regions. The reliance of plants on birds tends to be higher on islands, where birds typically pollinate 10 percent of the local flora. Perhaps most surprisingly, some lizard species are also pollinators, especially on islands.

The distribution and health of vertebrate pollinators is well documented compared to insect species, allowing, the authors argue, for targeted conservation efforts. As pollinating bird and mammal species fall under increasing pressure from habitat conversion to agriculture needs, fire, hunting, and invasions of non-native species, their plant companions and other species that feed on fruits and seeds are also at risk.

A male ruby-throated hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) approaches a bee balm flower (Monarda didyma) in Lake Placid, New York. Although less familiar than insect pollinators, some species with backbones, among them birds, bats, mice, and even lizards, also carry pollen between plants as they visit flowers for a high energy snack. As vertebrate species decline worldwide under pressure from human development, the plants they serve are also impacted. Over 920 species of birds are pollinators, serving about 5 percent of the plants in most regions.
Photo courtesy of Larry Master

Journal Article:

Fabrizia Ratto et al (2018) Global importance of vertebrate pollinators for plant reproductive success: a meta-analysis. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment doi: 10.1002/fee.1763

 

Author Contact:

Fabrizia Ratto    ku.ca.notosnull@31g2rf

 

Authors:

Fabrizia Ratto                  University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

Benno I Simmons           University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

Rebecca Spake                University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez        University of Southampton, UK; Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Durango, Mexico

Michael A MacDonald   Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), Sandy, UK

Jennifer C Merriman      BirdLife International, Cambridge, UK

Constance J Tremlett     University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

Guy M Poppy                   University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

KelvinS-H Peh                  University of Southampton, Southampton, UK; University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

Lynn V Dicks                     University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

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