In plants, negative reproductive interaction among closely related species (i.e., reproductive interference) is known to hamper the coexistence of congeneric species while facilitation can increase species persistence. Since reproductive interference in plants may occur through interspecific pollination, the effective range of reproductive interference may reflects the spatial range of interspecific pollination. Therefore, we hypothesized that the coexistence of congeners on a small spatial scale would be less likely to occur by chance but that such coexistence would be likely to occur on a scale larger than interspecific pollination frequently occur. In the present study, we tested this hypothesis using spatially explicit woody plant surve...
International audiencePlant-pollinator interactions condition the seed set of insect-pollinated plan...
The strength of interactions between plants for pollination depends on the abundance of plants and p...
1. How do many species coexist within a trophic level? Resource niches are the classical answer, but...
When more than one closely related plant species share the same pollination niche, reproductive inte...
152 pagesModels are central to the role of science as a tool to make sense of the natural world. In ...
Pollinator-mediated competition and facilitation are two important mechanisms mediating co-flowering...
We used randomizations to analyse patterns of co-occurrence of sexual and apomictic (asexual) member...
Pollinator-mediated competition and facilitation are two important mechanisms mediating co-flowering...
To better understand the competitive processes involved in invasion by congeners, we examine coexist...
Studies on pollination networks have provided valuable information on the number, frequency, distrib...
1. Co-occurring and simultaneously fruiting plant species may either compete for dispersal by shared...
Many plant species show limited dispersal resulting in spatial and genetic substructures within popu...
Generalist pollinators are important in many habitats, but little research has been done on small-sc...
Selection to prevent interspecific mating can cause an increase or a decrease in self pollination in...
Spatial partitioning is a classic hypothesis to explain plant species coexistence, but evidence link...
International audiencePlant-pollinator interactions condition the seed set of insect-pollinated plan...
The strength of interactions between plants for pollination depends on the abundance of plants and p...
1. How do many species coexist within a trophic level? Resource niches are the classical answer, but...
When more than one closely related plant species share the same pollination niche, reproductive inte...
152 pagesModels are central to the role of science as a tool to make sense of the natural world. In ...
Pollinator-mediated competition and facilitation are two important mechanisms mediating co-flowering...
We used randomizations to analyse patterns of co-occurrence of sexual and apomictic (asexual) member...
Pollinator-mediated competition and facilitation are two important mechanisms mediating co-flowering...
To better understand the competitive processes involved in invasion by congeners, we examine coexist...
Studies on pollination networks have provided valuable information on the number, frequency, distrib...
1. Co-occurring and simultaneously fruiting plant species may either compete for dispersal by shared...
Many plant species show limited dispersal resulting in spatial and genetic substructures within popu...
Generalist pollinators are important in many habitats, but little research has been done on small-sc...
Selection to prevent interspecific mating can cause an increase or a decrease in self pollination in...
Spatial partitioning is a classic hypothesis to explain plant species coexistence, but evidence link...
International audiencePlant-pollinator interactions condition the seed set of insect-pollinated plan...
The strength of interactions between plants for pollination depends on the abundance of plants and p...
1. How do many species coexist within a trophic level? Resource niches are the classical answer, but...