Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy

Agri-environmental policies aim to reverse the degradation of ecosystem services in rural landscapes by implementing biodiversity-based land-use solutions. One such agri-environmental measure is the contract for bee-forage fields in Estonia. We developed a multi-site experiment to estimate the effec...

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Main Authors: J. Liira, I. Jürjendal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-10-01
Series:Ecological Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23010695
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author J. Liira
I. Jürjendal
author_facet J. Liira
I. Jürjendal
author_sort J. Liira
collection DOAJ
description Agri-environmental policies aim to reverse the degradation of ecosystem services in rural landscapes by implementing biodiversity-based land-use solutions. One such agri-environmental measure is the contract for bee-forage fields in Estonia. We developed a multi-site experiment to estimate the effect of plant diversity on the quality properties of flower-based services, such as flowering duration (indicating functional stability) and the foraging activity of insect pollinators (indicating functional intensity). Each site consisted of eight randomly ordered strip-segments forming a flower diversity gradient.The period of abundant flowering was longer in all kinds of species mixture than in monocultures. However, the foraging activity of honey bees and bumblebees was greatest in monocultures and in a low-diversity mixture, while a balanced high-diversity mixture was least attractive. Foraging activity was lowered when an abundant melliferous plant species was flowering within a high-diversity mixture (i.e. high species richness, but low evenness). The extended flowering of species mixtures did not compensate for the lower daily visitation rate.We challenge the largely biodiversity-oriented agricultural policy designs. This case study provides evidence that plant species richness is not a comprehensive indicator of the service provision quality of an ecosystem. Specifically, low-diversity flower areas are the best foraging sites for bees and other flower visitors. A field mosaic of various monocultures and low-diversity mixtures seems to be the ecologically most efficient rural landscape design to support bees and other potential pollinators. Suggested and marketed pollinator-oriented seed mixtures should be quantitatively tested for ecological efficiency.
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spelling doaj.art-718aaf2f9cce46328701817154f54d422023-09-16T05:30:23ZengElsevierEcological Indicators1470-160X2023-10-01154110927Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policyJ. Liira0I. Jürjendal1Institute of Ecology and Earth Science, University of Tartu, Estonia; Corresponding author.Tallinn Botanic Garden, Tallinn, EstoniaAgri-environmental policies aim to reverse the degradation of ecosystem services in rural landscapes by implementing biodiversity-based land-use solutions. One such agri-environmental measure is the contract for bee-forage fields in Estonia. We developed a multi-site experiment to estimate the effect of plant diversity on the quality properties of flower-based services, such as flowering duration (indicating functional stability) and the foraging activity of insect pollinators (indicating functional intensity). Each site consisted of eight randomly ordered strip-segments forming a flower diversity gradient.The period of abundant flowering was longer in all kinds of species mixture than in monocultures. However, the foraging activity of honey bees and bumblebees was greatest in monocultures and in a low-diversity mixture, while a balanced high-diversity mixture was least attractive. Foraging activity was lowered when an abundant melliferous plant species was flowering within a high-diversity mixture (i.e. high species richness, but low evenness). The extended flowering of species mixtures did not compensate for the lower daily visitation rate.We challenge the largely biodiversity-oriented agricultural policy designs. This case study provides evidence that plant species richness is not a comprehensive indicator of the service provision quality of an ecosystem. Specifically, low-diversity flower areas are the best foraging sites for bees and other flower visitors. A field mosaic of various monocultures and low-diversity mixtures seems to be the ecologically most efficient rural landscape design to support bees and other potential pollinators. Suggested and marketed pollinator-oriented seed mixtures should be quantitatively tested for ecological efficiency.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23010695Agri-environmental schemesBiodiversity effectsCommon Agricultural PolicyEco-schemesFunctional traitsInter-cropping
spellingShingle J. Liira
I. Jürjendal
Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
Ecological Indicators
Agri-environmental schemes
Biodiversity effects
Common Agricultural Policy
Eco-schemes
Functional traits
Inter-cropping
title Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
title_full Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
title_fullStr Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
title_full_unstemmed Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
title_short Are bees attracted by flower richness? Implications for ecosystem service-based policy
title_sort are bees attracted by flower richness implications for ecosystem service based policy
topic Agri-environmental schemes
Biodiversity effects
Common Agricultural Policy
Eco-schemes
Functional traits
Inter-cropping
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23010695
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