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Even morphologically similar pollinators carry distinct pollen assemblages

06.24.26 | University of Tsukuba

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Tsukuba, Japan—The body size, morphology, and associated behavioral traits of flower-visiting insects strongly influence the quantity of pollen they transport. Thus, pollinators with similar appearances are often assumed to exert similar ecological effects on plants. However, pollinators' effects on plants are not determined solely by the amount of pollen they carry. When insects move between different plant species, they may deposit heterospecific pollen (pollen from other plant species) on stigmas, potentially interfering with successful pollination. This raises the question of whether floral fidelity—the extent to which insects concentrate their visits on particular plants species—is also shared among morphologically similar pollinator groups.

Researchers investigated this issue through a quantitative comparison of body pollen carried by diverse insect groups. The study focused on border privet ( Ligustrum obtusifolium ), a generalist plant species that attracts a wide range of insect pollinators. Only individuals collected from flowers of the same Ligustrum plants were analyzed to ensure that all insects were compared under the same floral environment. Insects were systematically collected during diurnal and nocturnal periods, and the pollen attached to their bodies was identified and quantified. The researchers found that both pollen composition and body pollen heterospecificity differed significantly both within and between insect groups.

Among the key findings, the pollen carried by nocturnal moths and eusocial bees ( Bombus ardens ) was more strongly dominated by a small number of plant species than that carried by butterflies and solitary bees, respectively. Notably, within a single bumble bee species, males exhibited a stronger bias toward specific plant species than females. In contrast, the hairy scarab beetle Gametis jucunda carried pollen from a wider range of plant species and showed a relatively high degree of heterospecificity than other beetles. Similarly, although hoverflies (syrphid flies) and other dipteran insects transported pollen from multiple plant taxa, their pollen assemblages differed markedly in species composition.

These findings demonstrate that even morphologically similar pollinators can differ markedly in the diversity and heterospecificity of pollen they transport. Such variation has important implications for understanding how different pollinators influence plant reproduction and evolution. More broadly, the results indicate that conventional morphological or taxonomic classifications of pollinators may not adequately capture their ecological functions, particularly with respect to HPT.

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This work was supported by a JSPS Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI no. 19K06834).

Title of original paper:
Heterospecificity of body pollen varies across and within trait-based groups of pollinators

Journal:
Arthropod-Plant Interactions

DOI:
10.1007/s11829-026-10249-2

TERADA, Kohei
Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba

Assistant Professor OHASHI, Kazuharu
Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba

Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences

Arthropod-Plant Interactions

10.1007/s11829-026-10249-2

Heterospecificity of body pollen varies across and within trait-based groups of pollinators

22-May-2026

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Akiko Miyaji
University of Tsukuba
miyaji.akiko.gm@un.tsukuba.ac.jp

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Tsukuba. (2026, June 24). Even morphologically similar pollinators carry distinct pollen assemblages. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y4YNY6L/even-morphologically-similar-pollinators-carry-distinct-pollen-assemblages.html
MLA:
"Even morphologically similar pollinators carry distinct pollen assemblages." Brightsurf News, Jun. 24 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y4YNY6L/even-morphologically-similar-pollinators-carry-distinct-pollen-assemblages.html.