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Predator Effects on Plant-Pollinator Interactions, Plant Reproduction, Mating Systems, and Evolution

Amanda D. Benoit, Susan Kalisz

2020Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics34 citationsDOI

Abstract

Plants are the foundation of the food web and therefore interact directly and indirectly with myriad organisms at higher trophic levels. They directly provide nourishment to mutualistic and antagonistic primary consumers (e.g., pollinators and herbivores), which in turn are consumed by predators. These interactions produce cascading indirect effects on plants (either trait-mediated or density-mediated). We review how predators affect plant-pollinator interactions and thus how predators indirectly affect plant reproduction, fitness, mating systems, and trait evolution. Predators can influence pollinator abundance and foraging behavior. In many cases, predators cause pollinators to visit plants less frequently and for shorter durations. This decline in visitation can lead to pollen limitation and decreased seed set. However, alternative outcomes can result due to differences in predator, pollinator, and plant functional traits as well as due to altered interaction networks with plant enemies. Furthermore, predators may indirectly affect the evolution of plant traits and mating systems.

Topics & Concepts

PollinatorPredationBiologyHerbivoreForagingTrophic levelEcologyPlant reproductionMatingPollinationPredatorTraitFood webMating systemAbundance (ecology)PollenProgramming languageComputer sciencePlant and animal studiesPlant Parasitism and ResistanceEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
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