Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry

Recent declines in wild pollinators represent a significant threat to the sustained provision of pollination services. Insect pollinators are responsible for an estimated 45% of strawberry crop yields, which equates to a market value of approximately £99 million per year in the UK alone. As an aggre...

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Main Authors: Dylan Hodgkiss, Mark J.F. Brown, Michelle T. Fountain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Enviroquest Ltd. 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Pollination Ecology
Online Access:https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/470
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spelling doaj-b6ebb5cd0ad243adba26e7c94b1bae0d2021-07-28T12:30:21ZengEnviroquest Ltd.Journal of Pollination Ecology1920-76032018-02-0122556610.26786/1920-7603(2018)five277Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberryDylan Hodgkiss0Mark J.F. Brown1Michelle T. Fountain2Royal Holloway University of London, NIAB EMRRoyal Holloway University of LondonNIAB EMRRecent declines in wild pollinators represent a significant threat to the sustained provision of pollination services. Insect pollinators are responsible for an estimated 45% of strawberry crop yields, which equates to a market value of approximately £99 million per year in the UK alone. As an aggregate flower with unconcealed nectaries, strawberries are attractive to a diverse array of flower-visiting insects. Syrphine hoverflies, which offer the added benefit of consuming aphids during their predatory larval stage, represent one such group of flower visitor, but the extent to which aphidophagous hoverflies are capable of pollinating strawberry flowers remains largely untested. In replicated cage experiments we tested the effectiveness of strawberry pollination by the aphidophagous hoverflies Episyrphus balteatus and Eupeodes latifasciatus, and a mix of four hoverfly taxa, when compared to hand pollination and insect pollinator exclusion. Hoverflies were released into cages, and the strawberry fruits that resulted from pollinated flowers were assessed for quality measures. Hoverfly visitation increased strawberry yields by over 70% and doubled the proportion of marketable fruit, highlighting the importance of hoverflies for strawberry pollination.  A comparison between two hoverfly species showed that Eupeodes latifasciatus visits to flowers produced marketable fruit at nearly double the rate of Episyrphus balteatus, demonstrating that species may differ in their pollination efficacy even within a subfamily. Thus, this study offers compelling evidence that aphidophagous syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry and, as such, may be capable of providing growers with the dual benefit of pollination and aphid control.https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/470
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dylan Hodgkiss
Mark J.F. Brown
Michelle T. Fountain
spellingShingle Dylan Hodgkiss
Mark J.F. Brown
Michelle T. Fountain
Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
Journal of Pollination Ecology
author_facet Dylan Hodgkiss
Mark J.F. Brown
Michelle T. Fountain
author_sort Dylan Hodgkiss
title Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
title_short Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
title_full Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
title_fullStr Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
title_full_unstemmed Syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
title_sort syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry
publisher Enviroquest Ltd.
series Journal of Pollination Ecology
issn 1920-7603
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Recent declines in wild pollinators represent a significant threat to the sustained provision of pollination services. Insect pollinators are responsible for an estimated 45% of strawberry crop yields, which equates to a market value of approximately £99 million per year in the UK alone. As an aggregate flower with unconcealed nectaries, strawberries are attractive to a diverse array of flower-visiting insects. Syrphine hoverflies, which offer the added benefit of consuming aphids during their predatory larval stage, represent one such group of flower visitor, but the extent to which aphidophagous hoverflies are capable of pollinating strawberry flowers remains largely untested. In replicated cage experiments we tested the effectiveness of strawberry pollination by the aphidophagous hoverflies Episyrphus balteatus and Eupeodes latifasciatus, and a mix of four hoverfly taxa, when compared to hand pollination and insect pollinator exclusion. Hoverflies were released into cages, and the strawberry fruits that resulted from pollinated flowers were assessed for quality measures. Hoverfly visitation increased strawberry yields by over 70% and doubled the proportion of marketable fruit, highlighting the importance of hoverflies for strawberry pollination.  A comparison between two hoverfly species showed that Eupeodes latifasciatus visits to flowers produced marketable fruit at nearly double the rate of Episyrphus balteatus, demonstrating that species may differ in their pollination efficacy even within a subfamily. Thus, this study offers compelling evidence that aphidophagous syrphine hoverflies are effective pollinators of commercial strawberry and, as such, may be capable of providing growers with the dual benefit of pollination and aphid control.
url https://pollinationecology.org/index.php/jpe/article/view/470
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