Are plants in sown flower strips suitable for communities of wild bees? Pollination network approach in conservation biology
2021
O_LIDrastic reductions of insect diversity and abundance are observed in the highly fragmented agricultural landscapes of central Europe. Declines of pollinators may have detrimental effects on the reproduction of wild insect-pollinated plants as well as the yield of crops. In order to mitigate such impacts, sown flower strips on arable land within Agri-Environment Climate Schemes (AECS) are supported across EU countries. However, it is not clear whether sown flower strips provide equivalent benefits to wild flower-visiting insects as semi-natural habitats. C_LIO_LIHere, we apply plant-pollinator network approach to evaluate the function of sown flower strips for the communities of wild bees. We compared the structural characteristics and the robustness of plant-pollinator networks in sown flower strips and nearby semi-natural habitats. We also quantified the importance of individual plant species for bees based on simulations of plant-pollinator extinction cascades. C_LIO_LIWe found that assemblages of plants and pollinators were less diverse in sown flower strips than in semi-natural habitats, more generalized, and more nested. However, we did not find any significant differences in network robustness to plant-pollinator coextinctions. Further, simulations revealed a large variation in the functional importance among plant species from both habitats. C_LIO_LIWe conclude that although the analysis of network robustness suggested that plants in the sown flower strips and semi-natural habitats were functionally equivalent, this masked important differences among the two habitats. From the conservation point of view, semi-natural habitats were superior in supporting a more diverse community of solitary bees and bumblebees. C_LI
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