In Italy, alien acacias have been introduced for ornamental and reforestation purposes, and some species became invasive occupying patches of the Mediterranean landscape. On the Island of Elba (Central Italy), Acacia dealbata and A. pycnantha form dense stands at short distance, showing an impressive massive flowering at the end of the winter/early spring. Our aim was to investigate the behaviour of the two species in relation to the flowering features, from phenology to floral characteristics, and their replay to the observed flower visitors. Differences between the two species emerged on all the parameters considered. A. pycnantha peak of flowering occurred later than A. dealbata and showed larger flower heads (FHs), more flowers/head, stamens/flower and polyads. On A. dealbata, we recorded longer racemes and more FHs/raceme, determining a more flower-dense crown. Even if contacts with flower visitors were generally low on both species, A. dealbata showed a more heterogeneous visitor assemblage. Both acacias species interacted with local generalist pollinators, as bumblebees and honey bees. Flower handling and resource collection strategy by the honey bee indicate a long-term relationship between the bee and the acacias, with bees investing longer time on the larger A. pycnantha flower heads.

Two alien invasive acacias in Italy : Differences and similarities in their flowering and insect visitors / C. Giuliani, M. Giovanetti, B. Foggi, M. Mariotti Lippi. - In: PLANT BIOSYSTEMS. - ISSN 1126-3504. - 150:2(2016), pp. 285-294. [10.1080/11263504.2014.984792]

Two alien invasive acacias in Italy : Differences and similarities in their flowering and insect visitors

C. Giuliani
Primo
;
2016

Abstract

In Italy, alien acacias have been introduced for ornamental and reforestation purposes, and some species became invasive occupying patches of the Mediterranean landscape. On the Island of Elba (Central Italy), Acacia dealbata and A. pycnantha form dense stands at short distance, showing an impressive massive flowering at the end of the winter/early spring. Our aim was to investigate the behaviour of the two species in relation to the flowering features, from phenology to floral characteristics, and their replay to the observed flower visitors. Differences between the two species emerged on all the parameters considered. A. pycnantha peak of flowering occurred later than A. dealbata and showed larger flower heads (FHs), more flowers/head, stamens/flower and polyads. On A. dealbata, we recorded longer racemes and more FHs/raceme, determining a more flower-dense crown. Even if contacts with flower visitors were generally low on both species, A. dealbata showed a more heterogeneous visitor assemblage. Both acacias species interacted with local generalist pollinators, as bumblebees and honey bees. Flower handling and resource collection strategy by the honey bee indicate a long-term relationship between the bee and the acacias, with bees investing longer time on the larger A. pycnantha flower heads.
No
English
flower morphology; Acacia dealbata; plant-plant interactions; biological invasions; honey bee; flowering time; Acacia pycnantha; plant-insect interactions
Settore BIO/01 - Botanica Generale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2016
12-dic-2014
Taylor and Francis
150
2
285
294
10
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Two alien invasive acacias in Italy : Differences and similarities in their flowering and insect visitors / C. Giuliani, M. Giovanetti, B. Foggi, M. Mariotti Lippi. - In: PLANT BIOSYSTEMS. - ISSN 1126-3504. - 150:2(2016), pp. 285-294. [10.1080/11263504.2014.984792]
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
4
262
Article (author)
no
C. Giuliani, M. Giovanetti, B. Foggi, M. Mariotti Lippi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/486144
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