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Annals of Botany 87: 219-232, 2001
© 2001 Annals of Botany Company

Native or Exotic? Double or Single? Evaluating Plants for Pollinator-friendly Gardens

Sarah A. Corbet+, Jennie Bee§, Kanchon Dasmahapatra, Stephan Gale, Elizabeth Gorringe{ddagger}, Beverly La Ferla, Tom Moorhouse, Andrea Trevail, Yfke Van Bergen and Maria Vorontsova

Department of Zoology, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EJ

Received: 18 August 2000 ; Returned for revision: 6 September 2000 . Accepted: 11 October 2000

In a series of dawn-to-dusk studies, we examined the nature and accessibility of nectar rewards for pollinating insects by monitoring insect visits and the secretion rate and standing crop of nectar in the British native plant species Salvia pratensis, Stachys palustris, S. officinalis, Lythrum salicaria, Linaria vulgaris, the non-native Calendula officinalis, Petunia x hybrida, Salvia splendens, and the possibly introduced Saponaria officinalis. We also compared single with double variants ofLotus corniculatus , Saponaria officinalis, Petunia x hybrida andCalendula officinalis . All the British species studied are nectar-rich and are recommended for pollinator-friendly gardens. They showed maximal secretion rates of about 10–90 µg sugar per flower h-1, and most had mean standing crops of about 5–60 µg sugar per flower. In all British species studied, the corolla was deep enough for the relatively long-tongued bumblebee Bombus pascuorum, but the shallower flowers of Lythrum salicaria were also much visited by shorter-tongued bees and hoverflies, as well as by butterflies. The exotic Salvia splendens, presumably coevolved with hummingbirds in the Neotropics, has such deep flowers that British bees cannot reach the nectar except by crawling down the corolla. With a secretion rate approaching 300 µg sugar per flower h-1and little depletion by insects, S. splendens accumulated high standing crops of nectar. S. splendens, and single and double flowers of the two probably moth-pollinated species Petunia x hybrida and Saponaria officinalis, received few daytime visits despite abundant nectar but Calendula was well visited by hoverflies and bees. We compared single and double variants of Lotus corniculatus,Petunia x hybrida and Calendula officinalis, and also Saponaria officinalis, the last being probably introduced in Britain (Stace, 1997 New flora of the British Isles. 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). In Petunia, Saponaria and Lotus, double flowers secreted little or no nectar. In Calendula, where doubling involved a change in the proportion of disc and ray florets rather than modification of individual flower structure, double and single capitula had similar standing crops of nectar. Except inCalendula , exotic or double flowers were little exploited by insect visitors. In the exotics, this was probably due to the absence or scarcity of coevolved pollinators, coupled, in double flowers, with the absence of nectar. Copyright 2001 Annals of Botany Company

Salvia pratensis, Salvia splendens, Stachys palustris, Stachys officinalis,Lythrum salicaria , Linaria vulgaris, Lotus corniculatus, Saponaria officinalis,Petunia x hybrida, Calendula officinalis, wild flowers, double flowers, gardens, nectar, secretion rate, standing crop, pollinators, bumblebees, Bombus, honeybees, Apis, hoverflies, butterflies,Anthidium manicatum


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