Front cover image for Anthophilous insect community and plant-pollinator interactions on Amami Islands in the Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan (Original paper)

Anthophilous insect community and plant-pollinator interactions on Amami Islands in the Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan (Original paper)

加藤, 真 (Contributor), KATO, Makoto (Creator), カトウ, マコト (Contributor) / 80204494 (Contributor)
Amami Islands, located in the northern part of the Ryukyu Archipelago, are endowed with subtropical climate and rich flora and fauna containing many endemic taxa. In various types of vegetation on the islands, such as Castanopsis-dominated lowland forests, Symplocos-dominated mountain forests, mangrove forests, coastal scrub and grassland, I surveyed the flowering phenology and anthophilous insect communities of 164 plant species from 1996 to 1999. Flowering was observed throughout the year, and peaked twice in March and July. A total of 2210 individuals of 610 species in 12 orders of Insecta were observed on the flowers. The most abundant order was Diptera (32% of individuals), followed by Coleoptera (28%), Hymenoptera (23%), Hemiptera (11%), Lepidoptera (4%). The bee fauna was composed of six families, 13 genera and 26 species, and characterized by dominance of small bees (e.g., Hylaeus, Lasioglossum and Andrena), large carpenter bees (Xylocopa) and long-tongued anthophorine bees (Tetralonia and Amegilla), and by absence of Bombus. The bee community contrasted with both the honeybee/stingless bee-dominated community in the Asian Tropics and the bumblebee-dominated community at temperate habitats. The rarity of social bees is thought to result from seasonal and annual/supra-annual variability in floral resource on the islands. I inferred the pollinators of each plant species by examining flower-visitor communities, visitor behavior, pollen attachment on visitor's body and floral morphology. Among 104 plant species examined, the most dominant pollination type was melittophily (61%), followed by myiophily (13%), unspecialized entomophily (9.6%), anemophily (6.7%), butterfly

Downloadable Archival Material, English, 2000-03-31
京都大学大学院人間・環境学研究科 Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, 2000-03-31