Cargando…
Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico
1. Traditional tropical agriculture often entails a form of slash‐and‐burn land management that may adversely affect ecosystem services such as pollination, which are required for successful crop yields. The Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico has a >4000 year history of traditional slash‐and‐burn agricu...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
John Wiley and Sons Inc.
2017
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5697652/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29200497 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12860 |
_version_ | 1783280658291884032 |
---|---|
author | Landaverde‐González, Patricia Quezada‐Euán, José Javier G. Theodorou, Panagiotis Murray, Tomás E. Husemann, Martin Ayala, Ricardo Moo‐Valle, Humberto Vandame, Rémy Paxton, Robert J. |
author_facet | Landaverde‐González, Patricia Quezada‐Euán, José Javier G. Theodorou, Panagiotis Murray, Tomás E. Husemann, Martin Ayala, Ricardo Moo‐Valle, Humberto Vandame, Rémy Paxton, Robert J. |
author_sort | Landaverde‐González, Patricia |
collection | PubMed |
description | 1. Traditional tropical agriculture often entails a form of slash‐and‐burn land management that may adversely affect ecosystem services such as pollination, which are required for successful crop yields. The Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico has a >4000 year history of traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture, termed ‘milpa’. Hot ‘Habanero’ chilli is a major pollinator‐dependent crop that nowadays is often grown in monoculture within the milpa system. 2. We studied 37 local farmers’ chilli fields (sites) to evaluate the effects of landscape composition on bee communities. At 11 of these sites, we undertook experimental pollination treatments to quantify the pollination of chilli. We further explored the relationships between landscape composition, bee communities and pollination service provision to chilli. 3. Bee species richness, particularly species of the family Apidae, was positively related to the amount of forest cover. Species diversity decreased with increasing proportion of crop land surrounding each sampling site. Sweat bees of the genus Lasioglossum were the most abundant bee taxon in chilli fields and, in contrast to other bee species, increased in abundance with the proportion of fallow land, gardens and pastures which are an integral part of the milpa system. 4. There was an average pollination shortfall of 21% for chilli across all sites; yet the shortfall was unrelated to the proportion of land covered by crops. Rather, chilli pollination was positively related to the abundance of Lasioglossum bees, probably an important pollinator of chilli, as well indirectly to the proportion of fallow land, gardens and pastures that promote Lasioglossum abundance. 5. Synthesis and applications. Current, low‐intensity traditional slash‐and‐burn (milpa) agriculture provides Lasioglossum spp. pollinators for successful chilli production; fallow land, gardens and pasture therefore need to be valued as important habitats for these and related ground‐nesting bee species. However, the negative impact of agriculture on total bee species diversity highlights how agricultural intensification is likely to reduce pollination services to crops, including chilli. Indeed, natural forest cover is vital in tropical Yucatán to maintain a rich assemblage of bee species and the provision of pollination services for diverse crops and wild flowers. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5697652 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | John Wiley and Sons Inc. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-56976522017-11-28 Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico Landaverde‐González, Patricia Quezada‐Euán, José Javier G. Theodorou, Panagiotis Murray, Tomás E. Husemann, Martin Ayala, Ricardo Moo‐Valle, Humberto Vandame, Rémy Paxton, Robert J. J Appl Ecol Agricultural Landscapes 1. Traditional tropical agriculture often entails a form of slash‐and‐burn land management that may adversely affect ecosystem services such as pollination, which are required for successful crop yields. The Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico has a >4000 year history of traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture, termed ‘milpa’. Hot ‘Habanero’ chilli is a major pollinator‐dependent crop that nowadays is often grown in monoculture within the milpa system. 2. We studied 37 local farmers’ chilli fields (sites) to evaluate the effects of landscape composition on bee communities. At 11 of these sites, we undertook experimental pollination treatments to quantify the pollination of chilli. We further explored the relationships between landscape composition, bee communities and pollination service provision to chilli. 3. Bee species richness, particularly species of the family Apidae, was positively related to the amount of forest cover. Species diversity decreased with increasing proportion of crop land surrounding each sampling site. Sweat bees of the genus Lasioglossum were the most abundant bee taxon in chilli fields and, in contrast to other bee species, increased in abundance with the proportion of fallow land, gardens and pastures which are an integral part of the milpa system. 4. There was an average pollination shortfall of 21% for chilli across all sites; yet the shortfall was unrelated to the proportion of land covered by crops. Rather, chilli pollination was positively related to the abundance of Lasioglossum bees, probably an important pollinator of chilli, as well indirectly to the proportion of fallow land, gardens and pastures that promote Lasioglossum abundance. 5. Synthesis and applications. Current, low‐intensity traditional slash‐and‐burn (milpa) agriculture provides Lasioglossum spp. pollinators for successful chilli production; fallow land, gardens and pasture therefore need to be valued as important habitats for these and related ground‐nesting bee species. However, the negative impact of agriculture on total bee species diversity highlights how agricultural intensification is likely to reduce pollination services to crops, including chilli. Indeed, natural forest cover is vital in tropical Yucatán to maintain a rich assemblage of bee species and the provision of pollination services for diverse crops and wild flowers. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-01-27 2017-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5697652/ /pubmed/29200497 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12860 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Journal of Applied Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Agricultural Landscapes Landaverde‐González, Patricia Quezada‐Euán, José Javier G. Theodorou, Panagiotis Murray, Tomás E. Husemann, Martin Ayala, Ricardo Moo‐Valle, Humberto Vandame, Rémy Paxton, Robert J. Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title | Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title_full | Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title_fullStr | Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title_full_unstemmed | Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title_short | Sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the Yucatán Peninsula of tropical Mexico |
title_sort | sweat bees on hot chillies: provision of pollination services by native bees in traditional slash‐and‐burn agriculture in the yucatán peninsula of tropical mexico |
topic | Agricultural Landscapes |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5697652/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29200497 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12860 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT landaverdegonzalezpatricia sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT quezadaeuanjosejavierg sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT theodoroupanagiotis sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT murraytomase sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT husemannmartin sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT ayalaricardo sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT moovallehumberto sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT vandameremy sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico AT paxtonrobertj sweatbeesonhotchilliesprovisionofpollinationservicesbynativebeesintraditionalslashandburnagricultureintheyucatanpeninsulaoftropicalmexico |