Climatic conditions and landscape diversity predict plant–beeinteractions and pollen deposition in bee-pollinated plants
Sydenham, Markus A. K.; Dupont, Yoko L.; Nielsen, Anders; Olesen, Jens M.; Madsen, Henning Bang; Skrindo, Astrid Brekke; Rasmussen, Claus; Nowell, Megan Sara; Venter, Zander; Hegland, Stein Joar; Helle, Anders Gunnar; Skoog, Daniel Ingvar Jeuderan; Torvanger, Marianne Strand; Hanevik, Kaj-Andreas; Hinderaker, Sven Emil; Paulsen, Thorstein; Eldegard, Katrine; Reitan, Trond; Rusch, Graciela Monica
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2024-07-02Metadata
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Sydenham, M. A. K., Dupont, Y. L., Nielsen, A., Olesen, J. M., Madsen, H. B., Skrindo, A. B., Rasmussen, C., Nowell, M. S., Venter, Z. S., Hegland, S. J., Helle, A. G., Skoog, D. I. J., Torvanger, M. S., Hanevik, K., Hinderaker, S. E., Paulsen, T., Eldegard, K., Reitan, T., & Rusch, G. M. (2024). Climatic conditions and landscape diversity predict plant–bee interactions and pollen deposition in bee‐pollinated plants. Ecography, 2024(9). Portico. 10.1111/ecog.07138Abstract
Climate change, landscape homogenization, and the decline of beneficial insectsthreaten pollination services to wild plants and crops. Understanding how pollinationpotential (i.e. the capacity of ecosystems to support pollination of plants) is affectedby climate change and landscape homogenization is fundamental for our ability topredict how such anthropogenic stressors affect plant biodiversity. Models of pollina-tor potential are improved when based on pairwise plant–pollinator interactions andpollinator’s plant preferences. However, whether the sum of predicted pairwise interac-tions with a plant within a habitat (a proxy for pollination potential) relates to pollendeposition on flowering plants has not yet been investigated. We sampled plant–beeinteractions in 68 Scandinavian plant communities in landscapes of varying land-coverheterogeneity along a latitudinal temperature gradient of 4–8°C, and estimated pollendeposition as the number of pollen grains on flowers of the bee-pollinated plants Lotuscorniculatus and Vicia cracca. We show that plant–bee interactions, and the pollinationpotential for these bee-pollinated plants increase with landscape diversity, annual meantemperature, and plant abundance, and decrease with distances to sand-dominatedsoils. Furthermore, the pollen deposition in flowers increased with the predicted pol-lination potential, which was driven by landscape diversity and plant abundance. Ourstudy illustrates that the pollination potential, and thus pollen deposition, for wildplants can be mapped based on spatial models of plant–bee interactions that incorpo-rate pollinator-specific plant preferences. Maps of pollination potential can be used toguide conservation and restoration planning. ecological networks, ecosystem service mapping, landscape diversity, plant–pollinator interactions, pollination