生物多样性 ›› 2025, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (8): 25142.  DOI: 10.17520/biods.2025142

• 综述 • 上一篇    下一篇

花蜜的分泌行为、生产代价和调控

牛莉杰1,3,侯英英1,3,文诗嘉1,张海萍2,3,曲比阿且1,3,付元生1,4,王红1,任宗昕1,3   

  1. 1.中国科学院昆明植物研究所东亚植物多样性与生物地理学重点实验室, 昆明650201 2.中国科学院动物研究所农业虫害鼠害综合治理研究国家重点实验室, 北京 100101 3.中国科学院大学,北京 100049 4.西南林业大学林学院,昆明 650224
  • 收稿日期:2025-04-18 修回日期:2025-07-02 接受日期:2025-08-11 出版日期:2025-08-20 发布日期:2025-09-17
  • 通讯作者: 任宗昕

Floral nectar: Secretion behavior, cost and regulation

Lijie Niu1,3, Yingying Hou1,3, Shijia Wen1, Haiping Zhang2,3, Aqie Qibi1,3, Yuansheng Fu1,4, Hong Wang1, Zongxin Ren1,3   

  1. 1 CAS Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming 650201 

    2 State Key Laboratory of Integrated Management of Pest Insects and Rodents in Agriculture, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101 

    3 University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049 

    4 College of Forestry, Southwest Forestry University, Kunming 650224

  • Received:2025-04-18 Revised:2025-07-02 Accepted:2025-08-11 Online:2025-08-20 Published:2025-09-17
  • Contact: Zongxin Ren

摘要: 花蜜作为大多数开花植物提供给传粉动物的重要报酬和能量来源,是植物-传粉者互作关系形成的关键,深刻影响着生态系统功能和粮食安全。在全球变化背景下,植物-传粉者互作网络正面临前所未有的挑战,对传粉动物健康的担忧使得花蜜的研究备受关注。本文系统综述了花蜜分泌规律的研究进展,重点关注花蜜分泌的动态、生产代价及其调控机制。研究表明,花蜜分泌是植物应对传粉环境和资源权衡的投资行为,吸引和操控传粉动物的访花从而实现传粉;花蜜分泌呈现显著的时空动态变化,这一过程受到植物内在生理机制和外部环境因素的双重调控;花蜜生产是植物的重要投资代价,但相应的实验证据还很少;花蜜回收是植物优化资源分配的重要策略,但是分泌与回收两个相反的过程是否同时发生并调控花蜜特征的机制和生态意义尚需进一步探索。本文提出未来研究方向应着重关注花蜜的最基础问题:(1)花蜜的分泌行为机制:解析花蜜分泌与回收的动态平衡机制及其调控规律; (2)花蜜对传粉动物行为的影响和操控及其对传粉综合征的塑造;(3)花蜜的投资代价:探讨花蜜生产的能量代谢基础及其资源分配代价;(4)花蜜资源景观分布和变迁对传粉网络稳定性和粮食安全的影响。这些研究将有助于深入理解植物-传粉者互作系统的维持机制及其对全球变化的响应策略。

关键词: 植物-传粉者互作, 花蜜, 分泌动态, 代价, 调控

Abstract

Aim: Floral nectar is the reward and energy resource many flowers provide to pollinating animals. It plays a key role in constructing the plant-pollinator interaction which strongly influences ecosystem function and food security. Under the current global change situation, plant-pollinator networks are seriously impacted, consequently, floral nectar is getting more and more attention due to its importance to pollinator health. In this review, we systematically summarize the current progress of floral nectar secretion patterns, we specifically focus on nectar dynamic, the cost to a plant to produce nectar and the regulation of nectar attributes. 

Progress: Previous research suggests that floral nectar is a plant behavior responding to pollination environments and a trade-off in reproductive resource allocation. Floral nectar attracts pollinators to visit flowers and manipulates floral foraging behaviors of pollinators to achieve pollination. Nectar secretion is highly dynamic at spatial and temporal scale, and it is influenced by the eco-physiology of the plant itself and environmental factors. Nectar production is an essential cost for the plant, however, the evidence to support nectar production cost is limited. Nectar reabsorption is an important mechanism to optimal allocation of floral resources. Moreover, if plants use the processes of nectar secretion and absorption, possibly simultaneously, to regulate floral nectar attributes. However, the ecological function of such regulation is largely unknown. 

Outlook: In the future, we suggest focusing on these basic questions involving floral nectar. (1) To explore the mechanism of floral nectar production behavior. To uncover how nectar production and absorption homeostatically regulate floral nectar attributes. (2) To investigate how floral nectar influences and manipulates pollinators’ behavior and shapes pollination syndromes. (3) To understand the cost of nectar production to a plant and the energy translocation and floral resource allocation during plant reproduction. (4) To study the distribution and movement of nectar at the landscape level and how such changes influence plant-pollinator interactions and food production. This research will enrich our understanding of plant-pollinator interaction and predict the response of pollination to global change.

Key words: plant-pollinator interaction, floral nectar, secretion dynamic, cost, regulation