2023
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10687
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Artificial flowers as a tool for investigating multimodal flower choice in wild insects

Kathryn M. Chapman,
Freya J. Richardson,
Caitlyn Y. Forster
et al.

Abstract: Flowers come in a variety of colours, shapes, sizes and odours. Flowers also differ in the quality and quantity of nutritional reward they provide to entice potential pollinators to visit. Given this diversity, generalist flower‐visiting insects face the considerable challenge of deciding which flowers to feed on and which to ignore. Working with real flowers poses logistical challenges due to correlations between flower traits, maintenance costs and uncontrolled variables. Here, we overcome this challenge by … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Artificially-bred cultivars could act as cognitive traps, providing a super-stimulus of colour or odour without providing a large reward, or only providing an unbalanced reward. While there is a correlation between nutritional offering and attractiveness (Comba et al 1999; Corbet et al 2001; SChapman et al 2023), little information exists about the nectar or pollen productivity of most ornamental plants, nor of the nutritional content of the nectar and pollen offered.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Artificially-bred cultivars could act as cognitive traps, providing a super-stimulus of colour or odour without providing a large reward, or only providing an unbalanced reward. While there is a correlation between nutritional offering and attractiveness (Comba et al 1999; Corbet et al 2001; SChapman et al 2023), little information exists about the nectar or pollen productivity of most ornamental plants, nor of the nutritional content of the nectar and pollen offered.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the reverse situation also exists – for example, Anthemis tinctoria was reported to attract a wide variety of pollinators such as wild bees, flies, and butterflies, but not honey bees or bumble bees (Rollings and Goulson 2019). While various floral traits have been found to correlate with attractiveness to pollinators (such as floral area cover (Grindeland et al 2005; Marquardt et al 2021a; Kalaman et al 2022), colour (Reverté et al 2016; Chapman et al 2023), shape (Howard et al 2019; Erickson et al 2022; Chapman et al 2023), and nutritional offering (Comba et al 1999; Corbet et al 2001; Chapman et al 2023)), the huge variety of cultivars and interaction with local conditions make accurate prediction of cultivar attractiveness difficult. As such, Rollings and Goulson (2019) recommend that tests for the attractiveness of a wide variety of ornamental cultivars be carried out, ideally at various sites with varying environmental conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The observer’s line of sight was at the same plane as the models. A response was defined as landings or approaching at least 5 cm above the models, as per other studies (Nordström et al 2017; Matoušková et al 2023; Chapman et al 2023). The time period for each observation was capped at 5 minutes.…”
Section: Artificial Floral Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%