Pollination involves a range of different animals, and several types of rewards. Floral
resin occurs in many, probably most species of
Clusia. The resin is produced by the stamens (by sterile stamens, referred to as
staminodes, in pistillate flowers) and is collected by bees that use it in nest construction. Nectar is most common in montane species, e.g.
Clusia clusioides, and these flowers are visited by insects such as moths and wasps, and sometimes by bats or hummingbirds. In flowers lacking nectar or resin, pollination may be carried out by pollen-eating beetles, which visit also the rewardless pistillate flowers, as observed in
Clusia criuva.
Clusia blattophila is pollinated by male cockroaches attracted by a pheromone-containing fluid produced by the flowers. Seeds are dispersed by birds and perhaps, in some cases, by small mammals.
Clusia plants provide excellent nesting sites for some insects. For instance,
Clusia grandiflora, a common species in Guianese forests, is an attractive place for
Polistes pacificus wasps to build their paper nests because arboreal ants, which often prey on these wasps, do not normally reside in this species of tree. ==Uses==