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Complementary Contribution of Wild Bumblebees and Managed Honeybee to the Pollination Niche of an Introduced Blueberry Crop
SIMPLE SUMMARY: Blueberry is a crop that is increasing globally, both in terms of yield and extent, mostly thanks to the recent introduction of North American blueberry in the temperate areas of Europe, Asia, and South America. As blueberry depends largely on insects for pollination, farmers in thes...
Autores principales: | , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8307808/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34208929 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12070595 |
Sumario: | SIMPLE SUMMARY: Blueberry is a crop that is increasing globally, both in terms of yield and extent, mostly thanks to the recent introduction of North American blueberry in the temperate areas of Europe, Asia, and South America. As blueberry depends largely on insects for pollination, farmers in these expansion areas face the challenge of adapting this crop to unexpected pollinator species, whose traits and features may not entirely fit the pollination needs of the introduced crop. Here we study the abundance, the behaviour, and the response to environmental conditions of different managed and wild native pollinators of blueberry in northern Spain. Our findings suggest the dominant role of native wild bumblebees and managed honeybee as suppliers of pollination service. Honeybee and bumblebees differed in both when and where they occurred, in how they responded to environmental conditions, and in how they behaved as an effective pollinator. The role of bumblebees and honeybee as blueberry pollinators thus seems complementary and additive. These results encourage the preservation of populations of native wild bees in order to ensure the effective management of introduced blueberry crops. ABSTRACT: The entomophilous pollination niche (abundance, phenotypic traits, foraging behaviours and environmental tolerances of insect pollinators) helps to understand and better manage crop pollination. We apply this niche approach to assess how an entomophilous crop (blueberry, Vaccinium ashei) can be expanded into new territories (i.e., northern Spain) far from their original area of domestication (North America). Insect visits to blueberry flowers were monitored in a plantation on 12 different days, at 8 different times during day and covering various weather conditions. Abundance, visitation rate, pollen gathering behaviour, and frequency of inter-plant and inter-row movements were recorded. The pollinator assemblage was basically composed of one managed honeybee species (50.8% of visits) and three native bumblebee species (48.3%). There was a marked pattern of seasonal segregation throughout bloom, with bumblebees dominating the early bloom and honeybee the late bloom. Pollinators also segregated along gradients of daily temperature and relative humidity. Finally, the two pollinator types differed in foraging behaviour, with bumblebees having a visitation rate double that of honeybee, collecting pollen more frequently and changing plant and row more frequently. The spatio-temporal and functional complementarity between honeybee and bumblebees suggested here encourages the consideration of an integrated crop pollination strategy for blueberries, based on the concurrence of both wild and managed bees. |
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