Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity

Context There have been dramatic global declines in pollinating insects. A common land management intervention to support wild pollinators is to plant non-crop flowering plants (‘pollinator planting’). However, there are limited data on which species or spatial arrangement of planting provide maximu...

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Main Authors: Martínez-Bauer, AE, Chadwick, FJ, Westmoreland, AJ, Lander, TA
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: Springer 2021
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author Martínez-Bauer, AE
Chadwick, FJ
Westmoreland, AJ
Lander, TA
author_facet Martínez-Bauer, AE
Chadwick, FJ
Westmoreland, AJ
Lander, TA
author_sort Martínez-Bauer, AE
collection OXFORD
description Context There have been dramatic global declines in pollinating insects. A common land management intervention to support wild pollinators is to plant non-crop flowering plants (‘pollinator planting’). However, there are limited data on which species or spatial arrangement of planting provide maximum benefit to wild pollinators. Objectives Here we investigate which flowering species and locations are visited by free-foraging Bombus terrestris (buff-tailed bumblebees) in species-rich semi-natural grassland and woodland. Methods Two study nests of buff-tailed bumblebees were established in Wytham Woods, UK. Pollen analogue pigments were sprayed on open flowers in the study area over a period of two months, with unique colours used to identify separate sections of the study area. Pollen load analysis was used to identify forage species and foraging locations. Results Bumblebees showed low flower constancy, visiting five flower species per trip on average, and as a group the sampled bumblebees visited 36 of the 49 plant species identified in study area surveys. Many individuals foraged in multiple, spatially-discrete locations during single trips. Conclusions The positive relationship between floral diversity and pollen load species diversity, and the positive relationship between site floral diversity and frequency of visitation, suggest behavioural strategies that maximize the diversity of flower species visited, in line with the energetic costs and benefits hypothesis. This supports recommendations for pollinator plantings with high species diversity, potentially spread across many small forage areas across the landscape.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e57e27e8-7e0a-4fbb-a82f-b79b4ca38e1c2022-03-27T10:24:22ZNovel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e57e27e8-7e0a-4fbb-a82f-b79b4ca38e1cEnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer2021Martínez-Bauer, AEChadwick, FJWestmoreland, AJLander, TAContext There have been dramatic global declines in pollinating insects. A common land management intervention to support wild pollinators is to plant non-crop flowering plants (‘pollinator planting’). However, there are limited data on which species or spatial arrangement of planting provide maximum benefit to wild pollinators. Objectives Here we investigate which flowering species and locations are visited by free-foraging Bombus terrestris (buff-tailed bumblebees) in species-rich semi-natural grassland and woodland. Methods Two study nests of buff-tailed bumblebees were established in Wytham Woods, UK. Pollen analogue pigments were sprayed on open flowers in the study area over a period of two months, with unique colours used to identify separate sections of the study area. Pollen load analysis was used to identify forage species and foraging locations. Results Bumblebees showed low flower constancy, visiting five flower species per trip on average, and as a group the sampled bumblebees visited 36 of the 49 plant species identified in study area surveys. Many individuals foraged in multiple, spatially-discrete locations during single trips. Conclusions The positive relationship between floral diversity and pollen load species diversity, and the positive relationship between site floral diversity and frequency of visitation, suggest behavioural strategies that maximize the diversity of flower species visited, in line with the energetic costs and benefits hypothesis. This supports recommendations for pollinator plantings with high species diversity, potentially spread across many small forage areas across the landscape.
spellingShingle Martínez-Bauer, AE
Chadwick, FJ
Westmoreland, AJ
Lander, TA
Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title_full Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title_fullStr Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title_full_unstemmed Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title_short Novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
title_sort novel pollen analogue technique shows bumblebees display low floral constancy and prefer sites with high floral diversity
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AT westmorelandaj novelpollenanaloguetechniqueshowsbumblebeesdisplaylowfloralconstancyandprefersiteswithhighfloraldiversity
AT landerta novelpollenanaloguetechniqueshowsbumblebeesdisplaylowfloralconstancyandprefersiteswithhighfloraldiversity