Bees, wasps, flies, beetles and butterflies visit the flowers for nectar. Milkweed plants typically produce a lot of nectar, it is replenished overnight, to the delight of nocturnal moths, and the remaining nectar is ready for the first diurnal visitors in the morning.
For accessing nectar, floral visitors prop themselves on one of the five flower hoods, sliding their tongues down the side of the hood where the nectar is held. They must be careful not to slip their leg down into the flower between the anthers.
Pollina stuck to the legs of a great black wasp, Sphex pensylvanicus |
In a study by Fishbein and Venable (1996), small- and medium-sized bees, and medium-sized butterflies had the lowest removal rates of pollinia. Their study found that it was the larger bees, like bumble bees that were most effective at transferring pollinia from one plant to the other.
Leafcutter bee, Megachile sp. alighting on top of the flower hoods to nectar. |
Leafcutter bees are common visitors of milkweed feeding on nectar. They rarely snag pollinium sacs so are considered ineffective pollinators.
This particular cuckoo bee is a cleptoparasite of leafcutter bees, Megachile spp. Females have a tapered abdomen ending in a sharp point that is used to break through leafcutter brood cells.
Another example of a small-sized bee, yellow faced bees, Hylaeus spp. are frequent visitors to swamp milkweed in late summer for nectar.
Soldier beetles, Chauliognathus spp. also love to feed on nectar on milkweed plants but are rarely found carrying pollinia.
What seems to be a not-so-mutualistic relationship between floral visitor and plant, where floral visitors are exploiting nectar resources, cross-pollination is still occurring due to the effective visitation by large bees, who transfer the polllinium sacs from one plant to another.
References
Fishbein, M., & Venable, D. L. (1996). Diversity and temporal change in the effective pollinators of Asclepias tuberosa. Ecology, 1061-1073.
Ivey, C. T., Martinez, P., & Wyatt, R. (2003). Variation in pollinator effectiveness in swamp milkweed, Asclepias incarnata (Apocynaceae). American Journal of Botany, 90(2), 214-225.
Kephart, S. R. (1983). The partitioning of pollinators among three species of Asclepias. Ecology, 120-133.