Journal article

Deconstructing pollinator community effectiveness

BK Willcox, MA Aizen, SA Cunningham, MM Mayfield, R Rader

Current Opinion in Insect Science | Published : 2017

Open access

Abstract

Effective pollination is a complex, context-dependent phenomenon determined by both species-level and community-level factors. While pollinator communities are constituted by interacting organisms in a shared environment, these factors are often simplified or overlooked when quantifying species-level pollinator effectiveness alone. Here, we review the recent literature on pollinator effectiveness to identify the pros and cons of existing methods and outline three important areas for future research: plant-pollinator interactions, heterospecific pollen transfer and variation in pollination outcomes. We conclude that pollinator community effectiveness needs to be acknowledged as a key property..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Ian Potter Foundation


Awarded by Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation


Awarded by Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award


Awarded by National Fund for Research of Argentina



Funding Acknowledgements

B.K.W. was supported by a PhD scholarship from the University of New England and funded by RnD4Profit-14-01-008 "Multi-scale monitoring tools for managing Australian Tree Crops: Industry meets innovation". R.R. was supported by the Ian Potter Foundation (ref:20160335), a Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation grant for the project "Secure Pollination for More Productive Agriculture (RnD4Profit-15-02-035)" and an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award DE170101349. M.A.A. was supported by a grant from the National Fund for Research of Argentina (PICT 2015-3333).