首页|Flies are important pollinators of mass-flowering caraway and respond to landscape and floral factors differently from honeybees

Flies are important pollinators of mass-flowering caraway and respond to landscape and floral factors differently from honeybees

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Non-bee insects have been identified as important crop pollinators globally. However, strategies to protect pollinators and enhance crop pollination usually focus on supporting bees. This study examined the effects of landscape structure, location within field, and floral resources on pollinators' visits on mass-flowering caraway (Carum carvi L.) in boreal farmland, and the effects of the visits on caraway yield. Pollinator visits on caraway flowers were monitored and caraway yield measured in 30 fields at landscapes ranging from field-dominated to forest-dominated landscapes. Hoverflies were the most abundant flower-visitors of caraway, followed by honeybees. Hoverflies and other flies made more flower visits on caraway than all bee species combined. Pollinator groups differed in their responses to landscape and local factors. Flies were most abundant near field edges and in landscapes with high forest cover. Non-syrphid flies and solitary bees responded positively to the cover of flowering herbs in the adjacent field margins. Flower visits by honeybees, instead, were positively related to the flowering crop cover in the study fields. Caraway seed yield increased with increasing number of flower visits by honeybees, hoverflies and all pollinators together. Pollinator exclusion reduced caraway fruit set (i.e. the number of fruits per flower) by 13% and seed yield by 40%. Our study is the first to report the high importance of flies to crop pollination in boreal farmland, where caraway is an important export crop. The results highlight the need of taking flies and their habitat requirements into account when developing strategies to enhance crop pollination.

Carum carviCrop pollinationForestHoverfliesLandscape structureSyrphid flies

Toivonen, Marjaana、Karimaa, Anna-Elina、Herzon, Irina、Kuussaari, Mikko

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Finnish Environm Inst SYKE, Biodivers Ctr, Latokartanonkaari 11, FI-00790 Helsinki, Finland

Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, POB 65, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland

Univ Helsinki, Dept Agr Sci, POB 27, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland

2022

Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment

Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment

ISSN:0167-8809
年,卷(期):2022.323
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