4.7 Article

Pollination services are mediated by bee functional diversity and landscape context

Journal

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 200, Issue -, Pages 12-20

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2014.10.018

Keywords

Agroecosystems; Functional complementarity; Honey bees; Malus x domestica; Pollination limitation; Wild bees

Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Fonds de Recherche Nature et Technologies Quebec
  3. Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Sciences
  4. Federation des Producteurs de Pommes du Quebec
  5. Canada Research Chair program

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Wild bees, which exhibit multiple functional traits enabling pollination of apples (Malus domestica Borkh), can potentially compensate for recent declines in domesticated honey bees (Apis mellifera Linnaeus) that are conventionally employed to ensure apple fruit and seed set. Whether compensation is possible will depend on functional diversity in the wild bee community and on the distribution of habitat and resources within the landscape surrounding an orchard that affect wild bee abundance. We studied pollination services and bee functional diversity in 20 apple orchards in southern Quebec, Canada. We evaluated pollinator efficacy by studying: apple visitation rates, approach (front or side-working), body size, foraging type (pollen or nectar foraging), sociality, temporal and climatic activity patterns, and pollen carrying habit. Pollination services were measured as apple fruit set and seed set. A distance-based measure of functional diversity, calibrated with bee traits and weighted by species relative abundance in the wild bee community, was used to model pollination services. We correlated the landscape composition and configuration of surrounding natural (forest) and semi-natural (meadow) habitats with bee diversity and pollination services. The incidence of fruit set and seed set in orchards increased with bee functional diversity. Complementarity between managed versus unmanaged bees in traits associated with foraging and resource use drove this relationship. Seed set was also negatively correlated with both the mean distance from surrounding meadows and the total area of surrounding orchards. Bee functional diversity was positively associated with surrounding meadow and forest area. These two land classes complement each other in their seasonal provision of foraging resources for bees. Our models can be used to prescribe management and conservation objectives for bee habitat management that promote pollination services. We identify useful wild bee pollinators and discuss their needs in terms of landscape composition and configuration. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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