pollination

ESM01 Fire and grazing modulate the structure and resistance of plant-floral visitor networks in a tallgrass prairie

Abstract: 

Data from the study: Welti, E.A.R. and Joern, A. 2017. Fire and Grazing modulate the structure and resistance of plant-floral visitor networks in a tallgrass prairie. Oecologia 186: 447-458.

EMS011 dataset contains counts of blooming inflorescences of plant species on 12 Konza watersheds in June-July of 2014; ESM012 dataset contains associations between flower-visiting insects and insect-pollinated flowering plants on 12 Konza watersheds collected in May-July of 2014; ESM013 dataset describes insects belonging to the orders of Coleoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera collected in pantrap transects on 12 Konza watersheds collected in June - July of 2014.

Core Areas: 

Data set ID: 

133

Short name: 

ESM01

Purpose: 

Determine number of blooming inflorescences of insects-pollinated plant species on 12 Konza watersheds; determine flower-visitor and insect - pollinated plant associations and community interaction network structure; and determine community composition and abundance of flowering-visiting insects on Konza watersheds.

Data sources: 

Methods: 

ESM011: Location of sampling stations:1D, K1B, 4B, K4A, 20B, 20C, N1A, N1B, N4A, N4B, N20A, N20B.

Frequency of sampling: Twice, one in June and once in July 2014.

Variable measured: Number of blooming inflorescences of each plant species within two 5 x 50m plots.

Field methods: Within each watershed, one upland and one lowland location was selected haphazardly. At each location, counts of individual inflorescences for each flowering plant species were recorded within a 5 m x 50 m area plot.

ESM012: Location of sampling stations:1D, K1B, 4B, K4A, 20B, 20C, N1A, N1B, N4A, N4B, N20A, N20B.

Frequency of sampling: Twice, one in June and once in July 2014.

Variable measured: Abundance of flower-visiting insect morphospecies on inflorescences of flowering-plant species.

Field methods: Within each watershed, one upland and one lowland location was selected haphazardly. At each location, floral visiting insects were collected directly on the inflorescences of flowering plants using sweep nets, by hand, and by observation for large and easily identified insects for 1 person-hour within a 1 ha area by random (haphazard) walk. Insects were collected only if they belonged to one of four orders: Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera. Insects were separated by the species of flowering plant on which they were collected.

ESM013: Location of sampling stations:1D, K1B, 4B, K4A, 20B, 20C, N1A, N1B, N4A, N4B, N20A, N20B.

Frequency of sampling: Twice, one in June and once in July 2014.

Variable measured: Abundance insects belonging to the orders of Coleoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera.

Field methods: Within each watershed, one upland and one lowland location was selected haphazardly. Insects were collected using transects consisting of 12, 70 cm tall, elevated 9 oz. pan traps (two each of six inflorescent colors: purple, blue, yellow, orange, pink, and white) each spaced 5 meters apart, filled with soapy water, and left out for 3 days at each of the 24 sites during each sampling period. Only insects from the four major pollinator orders of Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera, and Lepidoptera were included. Collected insects were washed, stored in 70% alcohol, sorted to morphospecies, and identified to lowest possible taxonomic level.

Maintenance: 

complete

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