Pollen carryover, pollinator movement, and spatial context impact the delivery of pollination services in apple orchards

Author:

Hung Keng‐Lou James12ORCID,Fan Sophia L.1,Strang Caroline G.3,Park Mia G.4,Thomson James D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Oklahoma Biological Survey University of Oklahoma Norman Oklahoma USA

3. College of Natural Sciences, University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

4. Department of Entomology Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

Abstract

AbstractAssessing the relative contributions of different pollinator taxa to pollination services is a central task in both basic eco‐evolutionary research and applied conservation and agriculture. To that end, many studies have quantified single‐visit pollen deposition and visitation frequency, which together determine a pollinator species' rate of conspecific pollen delivery. However, for plant species that require or benefit from outcrossing, pollination service quality further depends upon the ratio of outcross to self‐pollen deposited, which is determined by two additional pollinator traits: pollen carryover and movement patterns among genetically compatible plant individuals. Here, we compare the pollination capacities of managed honey bees, native bumble bees, and native mining bees in apple—a varietally self‐incompatible commercial crop—when pollen carryover and pollinator movement patterns are considered. We constructed simulation models of outcross pollen deposition parameterized using empirically measured single‐visit pollen deposition, visitation frequency, and probabilities of intertree movement exhibited by each pollinator type, as well as pollen carryover patterns simulated based on parameters reported in the literature. In these models, we also explicitly specified the spatial relationships among cross‐compatible trees based on field‐realistic orchard layout schemes. We found that estimated pollination service delivery was considerably reduced for all pollinator types when pollen carryover and pollinator movement patterns were considered, as compared to when only single‐visit pollen deposition and visitation frequency were considered. We also found that the performance of different pollinator types varied greatly across simulated orchard layout schemes and pollen carryover scenarios, including one instance where bumble and mining bees reversed their relative rankings. In all simulations, native bumble and mining bees outperformed managed honey bees in terms of both outcross pollen delivery per unit time and per flower visited, with disparities being greatest under scenarios of low pollen carryover. We demonstrate the degree to which pollination studies may reach inaccurate conclusions regarding pollination service delivery when pollen carryover and pollinator movement patterns are ignored. Our finding of the strong context dependence of pollination efficiency, even within a single plant–pollinator taxon pair, cautions that future studies in both basic and applied pollination biology should explicitly consider the ecological context in which pollination interactions take place.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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