Surprisingly few 'busy bees' make global crops grow

bee
Credit: Lilla Frerichs/public domain

A major international study finds that surprisingly few bee species are responsible for pollinating the world's crops.

The paper, published in Nature Communications, suggests that only two percent of wild pollinate 80 percent of bee-pollinated crops worldwide. The study is one of the largest on bee to date.

While agricultural development and pesticides have been shown to produce sharp declines in many wild bee populations, the study shows these "busy bees" can remain abundant in agricultural landscapes.

The study gives a powerful economic rationale for conserving wild bees. It calculates the value of wild bee pollination to the global food system at $3,000 per hectare of insect-pollinated agricultural land, a number in the billions globally.

But the findings also offer a warning to conservation advocates hoping that economic arguments can justify the preservation of all . Moral reasons are still needed, researchers say.

"This study shows us that wild bees provide enormous economic benefits, but reaffirms that the justification for protecting species cannot always be economic," says Taylor Ricketts of the University of Vermont's Gund Institute For Ecological Economics, a study co-author. "We still have to agree that protecting biodiversity is the right thing to do."

Fifty-eight researchers worldwide conducted the three-year study, led by Prof. David Kleijn of the Netherlands' Wageningen University.

The study advances our understanding of wild bees' crucial role in the global food system. About two-thirds of the world's most important crops benefit from , including coffee, cacao and many fruits and vegetables.

Wild pollination is increasingly important with the growing instability of . Wild bees' agricultural value is now similar to that of honey bees, the study finds. Honey bees are no longer considered wild in many regions due to their intense management.

The most important wild bees for agriculture include some of the world's most common species, including the common eastern bumblebee (Bombus impatiens) in the U.S. and the red-tailed bumblebee (Bombus lapidarius) in Europe, researchers say.

One reason to preserve bee biodiversity is securing the future resiliency of global pollination systems, Ricketts says. Previous studies associate biodiversity with more stable pollination services over time.

"Species and populations can fluctuate significantly as landscapes and climates change," says Ricketts, who is also a professor in UVM's Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources. "So protecting a wide variety of our wild bees is crucial."

The paper outlines bee-friendly practices for farmers, including maintaining wildflowers and grass strips, organic farming techniques, and limiting - or delaying - the use of pesticides and other chemicals.

The study includes 90 individual studies of nearly 1,400 crop fields across five continents (North America, Europe, Asia, Africa and South America).

Regular monitoring found nearly 74,000 individual bees from nearly 785 species on crops. Of 20,000 known bee species, roughly two percent pollinated 80 per cent of crops.

"Rare and threatened species may play a less significant role economically than common species, but this does not mean their protection is less important," says Kleijn.

The economic benefits to people from nature - such as crop pollination, water purification, and carbon storage - are increasingly known as ecosystem services. The fact that nature provides these services has increasingly been used as a reason to protect the environment and its biodiversity.

The name of the study is "Delivery of crop pollination services is an insufficient argument for wild pollinator conservation."

Journal information: Nature Communications

Citation: Surprisingly few 'busy bees' make global crops grow (2015, June 16) retrieved 31 December 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2015-06-surprisingly-busy-bees-global-crops.html
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