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Late flowering time enhances insect pollination of turnip rape Full text
2019
Toivonen, Marjaana | Herzon, Irina | Rajanen, Hanne | Toikkanen, Jenni | Kuussaari, Mikko
Late flowering time enhances insect pollination of turnip rape Full text
2019
Toivonen, Marjaana | Herzon, Irina | Rajanen, Hanne | Toikkanen, Jenni | Kuussaari, Mikko
Ecological intensification has been proposed as a strategy to mitigate the impacts of conventional intensive land use on pollinators and insect pollination. However, research has concentrated on the effects of land management on pollinator abundance and diversity, while studies directly measuring pollination services are still lacking for many crops and regions. This study examines the effects of landscape heterogeneity, pesticide use intensity and flowering time on insect pollination of turnip rape Brassica rapa ssp. oleifera, a major oil crop at high latitudes. The field experiment included monitoring pollinator visits on turnip rape flowers and measuring yield in 34 spring‐sown turnip rape fields in Southern Finland. The fields were situated in two landscape types that differed in the cover of arable land and represented independent gradients of pesticide use intensity and flowering time. Based on flower visits and number of seeds per silique, turnip rape was best pollinated in fields with late flowering time. The result suggests a temporal mismatch between crop flowering and the availability of pollination service in early sown fields. The increase in flower visits during summer was steeper among fields with low than high pesticide use, possibly due to a faster colony growth of important bee pollinators. Pollinator community in turnip rape fields was more diverse in heterogeneous landscapes with less arable land than in homogeneous field‐dominated landscapes, suggesting higher stability of pollination services in diverse landscapes. Total yield per plant was positively related to pesticide use intensity. The relationship between insect pollination and total yield was weakened by high compensation capacity of turnip rape, the plants producing more flowers under poor pollination. Synthesis and applications. Crop pollination can be enhanced by shifting sowing time to better match crop flowering to the peak availability of the most important pollinators. Reduced pesticide use may also enhance pollination services but can lead to the total yield reduction due to pests. This highlights the need for pollinator‐friendly pest control methods to maintain turnip rape yields while conserving pollination services.
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Discussion paper: Sustainable increase of crop production through improved technical strategies, breeding and adapted management – A European perspective Full text
2019
Schröder, Peter | Sauvêtre, Andrés | Gnädinger, Friederike | Pesaresi, Paolo | Chmeliková, Lucie | Doğan, Nedim | Gerl, Georg | Gökçe, Ayhan | Hamel, Chantal | Millan, Rocio | Persson, Tomas | Ravnskov, Sabine | Rutkowska, Beata | Schmid, Thomas | Szulc, Wiesław | Teodosiu, Carmen | Terzi, Valeria
During the next decade it will be necessary to develop novel combinations of management strategies to sustainably increase crop production and soil resilience. Improving agricultural productivity, while conserving and enhancing biotic and abiotic resources, is an essential requirement to increase global food production on a sustainable basis. The role of farmers in increasing agricultural productivity growth sustainably will be crucial. Farmers are at the center of any process of change involving natural resources and for this reason they need to be encouraged and guided, through appropriate incentives and governance practices, to conserve natural ecosystems and their biodiversity, and minimize the negative impact agriculture can have on the environment. Farmers and stakeholders need to revise traditional approaches not as productive as the modern approaches but more friendly with natural and environmental ecosystems values as well as emerging novel tools and approaches addressing precise farming, organic amendments, lowered water consumption, integrated pest control and beneficial plant-microbe interactions. While practical solutions are developing, science based recommendations for crop rotations, breeding and harvest/postharvest strategies leading to environmentally sound and pollinator friendly production and better life in rural areas have to be provided.
Show more [+] Less [-]Crop pollination by insects in small-scale agroforestry farming in Tanzania Full text
2019
Context. The decline of pollinating insects worldwide threatens pollination services for wild angiosperms and important food crops. The importance of insect pollination services for food production has been documented for crops that are available on the global markets, and which stem from large-scale farming systems. Little effort has been directed towards understanding the role of insect pollinators in small-scale farming systems in developing countries, even though these systems feed a substantial part of the World’s population. Objective. I studied crop pollination by insects in a small-scale agroforestry farming system in the Kilimanjaro and Arusha regions in northern Tanzania. I assessed to which degree crop yield was limited by insect pollination; how environmental context and agricultural practices influenced pollinators, and consequently pollination and crop yield; to which degree local farmers were aware of pollinators; and local farmers’ potential vulnerability to changes in pollination services, in terms of declines in household income and food availability. Methods. I carried out a combination of observational and experimental ecological studies in a total of 24 local small-scale agroforestry type farms, and interviewed 147 local farmers, to assess the importance of insect pollination for production of watermelons (Citrullus lanatus Thunb., Cucurbitaceae). Insect pollination is essential for fruit development in watermelons, and watermelon is an important cash crop to local farmers in my study area. Main results. Results from hand-pollination experiments and observational studies of relationships between flower visits by insects and fruit quantity and quality, showed that watermelon crop yield was limited by pollination services. My findings indicate that local farmers can double the number of marketable fruits and increase sugar content of the watermelons by approximately 10%, if the watermelon flowers are sufficiently pollinated throughout the blossom period. The main groups of visitors to watermelon flowers were wild honeybees (Apis mellifera; 87.8%), followed by hoverflies (Syrphidae; 8.5%) and other Hymenoptera (3.7%). Environmental context influenced pollinators, and consequently pollination and crop yield; visitation rates by insects to watermelon flowers increased with abundance of co-occurring flowers of other plants, especially at high tree cover in the field surroundings. Visitation rates by non-honeybee visitors were higher at the edge compared to centre of crop fields. Pesticide spraying reduced visitation rates by 50% from the lowest to the highest observed frequencies of pesticide application. Increasing inputs of fertilizer and watering had little effect on crop yield, compared to enhanced pollination. Only 7% of the local farmers were aware of pollinators and their importance for crop pollination, although 67% of crops grown by local farmers for household food and income depended on insect pollination to a moderate to essential degree. Watermelon crops contributed nearly 25% of household income and were grown by 63% of the interviewed farmers. Management Implications. It is critically important that small-scale farmers understand the role of pollinators and their importance for agricultural production. Agricultural policies to improve yields in developing countries should include measures to improve pollination services, such as education and advisory services to local farmers on how to develop pollinator friendly habitats in agricultural landscapes. The seemingly alarming negative impact of pesticide use on flower visits by insects need to be addressed by the responsible management authorities, who should develop a sustainable strategy for managing pests and ensuring increased agriculture yield.
Show more [+] Less [-]Crop pollination by insects in small-scale agroforestry farming in Tanzania | Insektpollinering av landbruksvekster i småskala jordbruk i Tanzania Full text
2019
Sawe, Thomas Corodius
Context. The decline of pollinating insects worldwide threatens pollination services for wild angiosperms and important food crops. The importance of insect pollination services for food production has been documented for crops that are available on the global markets, and which stem from large-scale farming systems. Little effort has been directed towards understanding the role of insect pollinators in small-scale farming systems in developing countries, even though these systems feed a substantial part of the World’s population.Objective. I studied crop pollination by insects in a small-scale agroforestry farming system in the Kilimanjaro and Arusha regions in northern Tanzania. I assessed to which degree crop yield was limited by insect pollination; how environmental context and agricultural practices influenced pollinators, and consequently pollination and crop yield; to which degree local farmers were aware of pollinators; and local farmers’ potential vulnerability to changes in pollination services, in terms of declines in household income and food availability.Methods. I carried out a combination of observational and experimental ecological studies in a total of 24 local small-scale agroforestry type farms, and interviewed 147 local farmers, to assess the importance of insect pollination for production of watermelons (Citrullus lanatus Thunb., Cucurbitaceae). Insect pollination is essential for fruit development in watermelons, and watermelon is an important cash crop to local farmers in my study area.Main results. Results from hand-pollination experiments and observational studies of relationships between flower visits by insects and fruit quantity and quality, showed that watermelon crop yield was limited by pollination services. My findings indicate that local farmers can double the number of marketable fruits and increase sugar content of the watermelons by approximately 10%, if the watermelon flowers are sufficiently pollinated throughout the blossom period. The main groups of visitors to watermelon flowers were wild honeybees (Apis mellifera; 87.8%), followed by hoverflies (Syrphidae; 8.5%) and other Hymenoptera (3.7%). Environmental context influenced pollinators, and consequently pollination and crop yield; visitation rates by insects to watermelon flowers increased with abundance of co-occurring flowers of other plants, especially at high tree cover in the field surroundings. Visitation rates by non-honeybee visitors were higher at the edge compared to centre of crop fields. Pesticide spraying reduced visitation rates by 50% from the lowest to the highest observed frequencies of pesticide application. Increasing inputs of fertilizer and watering had little effect on crop yield, compared to enhanced pollination. Only 7% of the local farmers were aware of pollinators and their importance for crop pollination, although 67% of crops grown by local farmers for household food and income depended on insect pollination to a moderate to essential degree. Watermelon crops contributed nearly 25% of household income and were grown by 63% of the interviewed farmers.Management Implications. It is critically important that small-scale farmers understand the role of pollinators and their importance for agricultural production. Agricultural policies to improve yields in developing countries should include measures to improve pollination services, such as education and advisory services to local farmers on how to develop pollinator friendly habitats in agricultural landscapes. The seemingly alarming negative impact of pesticide use on flower visits by insects need to be addressed by the responsible management authorities, who should develop a sustainable strategy for managing pests and ensuring increased agriculture yield.
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