Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape

In Central Europe, agricultural intensification has led to increasing fragmentation and loss of semi-natural habitats. In turn, ecosystem services such as pollination are being lost when insect pollinators depend on semi-natural habitats. Calcareous grasslands are a highly threatened, biodiverse typ...

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Main Authors: Felix Klaus, Teja Tscharntke, Johannes Uhler, Ingo Grass
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-04-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198942100024X
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spelling doaj-23aac527da844fd68a2d04b2a32f2d7c2021-04-16T04:53:54ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942021-04-0126e01474Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscapeFelix Klaus0Teja Tscharntke1Johannes Uhler2Ingo Grass3University of Göttingen, Agroecology, Göttingen, Germany; Corresponding author.University of Göttingen, Agroecology, Göttingen, GermanyUniversity of Göttingen, Agroecology, Göttingen, Germany; University of Würzburg, Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology, Würzburg, GermanyUniversity of Hohenheim, Ecology of Tropical Agricultural Systems, Stuttgart, GermanyIn Central Europe, agricultural intensification has led to increasing fragmentation and loss of semi-natural habitats. In turn, ecosystem services such as pollination are being lost when insect pollinators depend on semi-natural habitats. Calcareous grasslands are a highly threatened, biodiverse type of semi-natural habitat that may substantially support wild pollinators and pollination services to surrounding habitats. Here, we studied spillover of pollinators and pollination services from calcareous grassland fragments of different sizes into the surrounding landscape for solitary and social bees, as well as hoverflies. We selected eight grassland fragments of varying sizes (0.05–9.41 ha) surrounded by simplified agricultural landscapes near Göttingen, Germany. To quantify pollination spillover, we established Phacelia tanacetifolia (Boraginaceae) plots at distances ranging from 0 to 400 m from grassland edges alongside field roads. Our experiment revealed the importance of calcareous grassland fragments as sources of solitary bees, of which visitation to Phacelia plants decreased with increasing distance from fragments. Larger grassland fragments supported more than twice as many solitary bees as smaller ones. The limited foraging range of solitary bees appeared to be compensated by other groups, such as bumblebees and hoverflies, which were less affected by distance, suggesting a greater forage radius and/or independence from the grassland fragments as habitat. Seed production of Phacelia plants increased with overall pollinator visitation and solitary bee visits specifically, but did not decrease with distance. In conclusion, calcareous grasslands need to be conserved or restored as major bee habitats, which support spillover of pollination services into the adjacent agricultural landscape.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198942100024XSpilloverFragmentationSemi-natural habitatPollinationWild beeHoverfly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Felix Klaus
Teja Tscharntke
Johannes Uhler
Ingo Grass
spellingShingle Felix Klaus
Teja Tscharntke
Johannes Uhler
Ingo Grass
Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
Global Ecology and Conservation
Spillover
Fragmentation
Semi-natural habitat
Pollination
Wild bee
Hoverfly
author_facet Felix Klaus
Teja Tscharntke
Johannes Uhler
Ingo Grass
author_sort Felix Klaus
title Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
title_short Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
title_full Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
title_fullStr Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
title_full_unstemmed Calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
title_sort calcareous grassland fragments as sources of bee pollinators for the surrounding agricultural landscape
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2021-04-01
description In Central Europe, agricultural intensification has led to increasing fragmentation and loss of semi-natural habitats. In turn, ecosystem services such as pollination are being lost when insect pollinators depend on semi-natural habitats. Calcareous grasslands are a highly threatened, biodiverse type of semi-natural habitat that may substantially support wild pollinators and pollination services to surrounding habitats. Here, we studied spillover of pollinators and pollination services from calcareous grassland fragments of different sizes into the surrounding landscape for solitary and social bees, as well as hoverflies. We selected eight grassland fragments of varying sizes (0.05–9.41 ha) surrounded by simplified agricultural landscapes near Göttingen, Germany. To quantify pollination spillover, we established Phacelia tanacetifolia (Boraginaceae) plots at distances ranging from 0 to 400 m from grassland edges alongside field roads. Our experiment revealed the importance of calcareous grassland fragments as sources of solitary bees, of which visitation to Phacelia plants decreased with increasing distance from fragments. Larger grassland fragments supported more than twice as many solitary bees as smaller ones. The limited foraging range of solitary bees appeared to be compensated by other groups, such as bumblebees and hoverflies, which were less affected by distance, suggesting a greater forage radius and/or independence from the grassland fragments as habitat. Seed production of Phacelia plants increased with overall pollinator visitation and solitary bee visits specifically, but did not decrease with distance. In conclusion, calcareous grasslands need to be conserved or restored as major bee habitats, which support spillover of pollination services into the adjacent agricultural landscape.
topic Spillover
Fragmentation
Semi-natural habitat
Pollination
Wild bee
Hoverfly
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198942100024X
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