Publication | Closed Access
The Importance of Non-Flying Mammals in Pollination
102
Citations
39
References
1991
Year
BiologyTerrestrial ArthropodNon-flying MammalsPollen GrainsBiogeographyNatural SciencesMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyEntomologyInsect ConservationMammal SpeciesTropical Insect ScienceSymbiosis
The importance of non-flying mammals as pollinators has been a matter of debate in recent years. In the present study, non-flying mammals were regularly captured visiting several species of proteaceous plant at five sites in eastern Australia. Pollen was present in the faeces of these mammals, suggesting that visits to flowers of these plants were taking place. The two mammal species most frequently recorded as visitors (Antechinus stuartii and Petaurus breviceps) were studied to assess their potential as pollen vectors. The magnitude of the pollen loads they carried (several thousand pollen grains per head) is comparable to that of nectar feeding birds in other studies (...)
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