Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects

Background Gardeners and park managers seeking to support biodiversity in urban areas often plant ornamentals attractive to flower-visiting insects. There is a huge diversity of garden plant varieties, and some recommendations are available as to which are attractive to insects. However, these are l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mihail Garbuzov, Karin Alton, Francis L.W. Ratnieks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2017-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/3066.pdf
_version_ 1797424430219001856
author Mihail Garbuzov
Karin Alton
Francis L.W. Ratnieks
author_facet Mihail Garbuzov
Karin Alton
Francis L.W. Ratnieks
author_sort Mihail Garbuzov
collection DOAJ
description Background Gardeners and park managers seeking to support biodiversity in urban areas often plant ornamentals attractive to flower-visiting insects. There is a huge diversity of garden plant varieties, and some recommendations are available as to which are attractive to insects. However, these are largely not based on rigorous empirical data. An important factor in consumer choice is the range of varieties available for purchase. In the UK, garden centres are a key link in the supply chain between growers and private gardens. This study is the first to determine the proportions of flowering ornamentals being sold that are attractive to flower-visiting insects. Methods We surveyed six garden centres in Sussex, UK, each over two days in 2015, by making 12 counts of insects visiting patches of each ornamental plant on display for sale that was in bloom. To provide a consistent baseline among different locations, we brought with us and surveyed marjoram (Origanum vulgare) plants in pots, which are known to be attractive to a wide range of flower-visiting insects. The attractiveness of plant varieties to insects was then expressed in two ways: the absolute number and relative to that on marjoram (‘marjoram score’), both per unit area of plant cover. In addition, we noted whether each variety was recommended as pollinator-friendly either via a symbol on the label, or by being included in the Royal Horticultural Society’s ‘Perfect for Pollinators’ list. Furthermore, we compared the attractiveness of plants that are typically grown for more than one year versus only one year. Results We surveyed 59–74 plant varieties in bloom across the six garden centres. In each garden centre, the distributions of variety attractiveness were highly skewed to the right, with most varieties being relatively unattractive, and few varieties highly attractive to flower-visiting insects. The median attractiveness of varieties with a recommendation was 4.2× higher than that of varieties without. But, due to the large variation there was a substantial number of both poor varieties that had a recommendation and good varieties that did not. Median attractiveness of multi-year plants was 1.6× that of single-year plants, with a similar overlap in distributions. Discussion Our study demonstrates the practicality of carrying out plant surveys in garden centres. Garden centres display large numbers of varieties for sale, most of which are in bloom. Furthermore, data gathered in garden centres appear to correlate well with data gathered in two previous studies in Sussex for plants established in gardens. Although it is unclear whether the varieties being sold in garden centres are a fair representation of varieties that are actually grown by gardeners, our results suggest that there might be considerable scope for making parks and gardens considerably more insect-friendly through judicious variety choices.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T08:02:06Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f360137a4a8c45e9b2468ba227c04265
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2167-8359
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T08:02:06Z
publishDate 2017-03-01
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format Article
series PeerJ
spelling doaj.art-f360137a4a8c45e9b2468ba227c042652023-12-03T00:42:13ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592017-03-015e306610.7717/peerj.3066Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insectsMihail Garbuzov0Karin Alton1Francis L.W. Ratnieks2Laboratory of Apiculture & Social Insects, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, East Sussex, United KingdomLaboratory of Apiculture & Social Insects, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, East Sussex, United KingdomLaboratory of Apiculture & Social Insects, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, East Sussex, United KingdomBackground Gardeners and park managers seeking to support biodiversity in urban areas often plant ornamentals attractive to flower-visiting insects. There is a huge diversity of garden plant varieties, and some recommendations are available as to which are attractive to insects. However, these are largely not based on rigorous empirical data. An important factor in consumer choice is the range of varieties available for purchase. In the UK, garden centres are a key link in the supply chain between growers and private gardens. This study is the first to determine the proportions of flowering ornamentals being sold that are attractive to flower-visiting insects. Methods We surveyed six garden centres in Sussex, UK, each over two days in 2015, by making 12 counts of insects visiting patches of each ornamental plant on display for sale that was in bloom. To provide a consistent baseline among different locations, we brought with us and surveyed marjoram (Origanum vulgare) plants in pots, which are known to be attractive to a wide range of flower-visiting insects. The attractiveness of plant varieties to insects was then expressed in two ways: the absolute number and relative to that on marjoram (‘marjoram score’), both per unit area of plant cover. In addition, we noted whether each variety was recommended as pollinator-friendly either via a symbol on the label, or by being included in the Royal Horticultural Society’s ‘Perfect for Pollinators’ list. Furthermore, we compared the attractiveness of plants that are typically grown for more than one year versus only one year. Results We surveyed 59–74 plant varieties in bloom across the six garden centres. In each garden centre, the distributions of variety attractiveness were highly skewed to the right, with most varieties being relatively unattractive, and few varieties highly attractive to flower-visiting insects. The median attractiveness of varieties with a recommendation was 4.2× higher than that of varieties without. But, due to the large variation there was a substantial number of both poor varieties that had a recommendation and good varieties that did not. Median attractiveness of multi-year plants was 1.6× that of single-year plants, with a similar overlap in distributions. Discussion Our study demonstrates the practicality of carrying out plant surveys in garden centres. Garden centres display large numbers of varieties for sale, most of which are in bloom. Furthermore, data gathered in garden centres appear to correlate well with data gathered in two previous studies in Sussex for plants established in gardens. Although it is unclear whether the varieties being sold in garden centres are a fair representation of varieties that are actually grown by gardeners, our results suggest that there might be considerable scope for making parks and gardens considerably more insect-friendly through judicious variety choices.https://peerj.com/articles/3066.pdfFlower-visiting insectsOrnamental plantsPollinatorsUrban ecologyWildlife-friendly gardeningGardens
spellingShingle Mihail Garbuzov
Karin Alton
Francis L.W. Ratnieks
Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
PeerJ
Flower-visiting insects
Ornamental plants
Pollinators
Urban ecology
Wildlife-friendly gardening
Gardens
title Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
title_full Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
title_fullStr Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
title_full_unstemmed Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
title_short Most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower-visiting insects
title_sort most ornamental plants on sale in garden centres are unattractive to flower visiting insects
topic Flower-visiting insects
Ornamental plants
Pollinators
Urban ecology
Wildlife-friendly gardening
Gardens
url https://peerj.com/articles/3066.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mihailgarbuzov mostornamentalplantsonsaleingardencentresareunattractivetoflowervisitinginsects
AT karinalton mostornamentalplantsonsaleingardencentresareunattractivetoflowervisitinginsects
AT francislwratnieks mostornamentalplantsonsaleingardencentresareunattractivetoflowervisitinginsects