Long corolla flowers in Tropical Andes favour nectar robbing by the Black Metaltail hummingbird: A study using citizen science and field observations

Understanding what drives the evolution of nectar‐robbing strategies is key for gaining insight into the functioning of pollination networks. However, nectar robbing is often an anecdotal behaviour, difficult to quantify and record through field observations, especially in hummingbirds, limiting our...

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Veröffentlicht in:Austral ecology 2024-09, Vol.49 (9)
Hauptverfasser: Camerlenghi, Ettore, Mangini, G. Giselle, Anderson, Rodolfo O., Cruz‐Gispert, Albert, Loosveld, Rikkert, Gonzáles, Paúl, Nolazco, Sergio
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container_issue 9
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container_title Austral ecology
container_volume 49
creator Camerlenghi, Ettore
Mangini, G. Giselle
Anderson, Rodolfo O.
Cruz‐Gispert, Albert
Loosveld, Rikkert
Gonzáles, Paúl
Nolazco, Sergio
description Understanding what drives the evolution of nectar‐robbing strategies is key for gaining insight into the functioning of pollination networks. However, nectar robbing is often an anecdotal behaviour, difficult to quantify and record through field observations, especially in hummingbirds, limiting our understanding of how ecological networks change across communities. Here, we report new records of nectar robbing by Peru's endemic Black Metaltail (Metallura phoebe) in a high‐elevation forest at ca. 4000 m a.s.l. and how this species uses either legitimate pollination feeding or nectar robbing in relation to corolla lengths. Furthermore, by analysing 452 citizen science records of photographic observations, we found that 36% of the photographs depicting a foraging event in this species were actually nectar‐robbing events. After identifying the plant species in all photographs involving foraging events, we describe how nectar robbing conducted by this hummingbird species is strongly associated with flowers that have longer corollas. We propose that the hummingbird‐flower interactions in harsh high‐altitude environments, where resources and competition vary markedly across seasons, can offer insight into the ecological drivers of nectar‐robbing behaviour in hummingbirds.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/aec.13591
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects altitude
Andes region
citizen science
corolla
ecology
evolution
Flowers
forests
hummingbirds
Metallura phoebe
Nectar
nectar robbing
New records
Peru
Plant nectar
Plant reproduction
Plant species
Pollination
Robbing behavior
species
title Long corolla flowers in Tropical Andes favour nectar robbing by the Black Metaltail hummingbird: A study using citizen science and field observations
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