Department of Entomology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801;
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 Dec 10;116(50):25147-25155. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1912801116. Epub 2019 Nov 25.
Intensive agriculture can contribute to pollinator decline, exemplified by alarmingly high annual losses of honey bee colonies in regions dominated by annual crops (e.g., midwestern United States). As more natural or seminatural landscapes are transformed into monocultures, there is growing concern over current and future impacts on pollinators. To forecast how landscape simplification can affect bees, we conducted a replicated, longitudinal assessment of honey bee colony growth and nutritional health in an intensively farmed region where much of the landscape is devoted to production of corn and soybeans. Surprisingly, colonies adjacent to soybean fields surrounded by more cultivated land grew more during midseason than those in areas of lower cultivation. Regardless of the landscape surrounding the colonies, all experienced a precipitous decline in colony weight beginning in August and ended the season with reduced fat stores in individual bees, both predictors of colony overwintering failure. Patterns of forage availability and colony nutritional state suggest that late-season declines were caused by food scarcity during a period of extremely limited forage. To test if habitat enhancements could ameliorate this response, we performed a separate experiment in which colonies provided access to native perennials (i.e., prairie) were rescued from both weight loss and reduced fat stores, suggesting the rapid decline observed in these agricultural landscapes is not inevitable. Overall, these results show that intensively farmed areas can provide a short-term feast that cannot sustain the long-term nutritional health of colonies; reintegration of biodiversity into such landscapes may provide relief from nutritional stress.
集约化农业可能导致传粉媒介减少,例如,在美国中西部地区,每年有大量的蜜蜂蜂群因种植一年生作物而损失。随着越来越多的自然或半自然景观被转化为单一栽培,人们越来越关注当前和未来对传粉媒介的影响。为了预测景观简化如何影响蜜蜂,我们在一个集约化农业地区进行了重复的、纵向的蜜蜂种群增长和营养健康评估,该地区的大部分景观都用于玉米和大豆的生产。令人惊讶的是,与周围种植更多土地的大豆田相邻的蜂群在中期的生长速度比那些在低种植区的蜂群快。无论蜂群周围的景观如何,所有蜂群在 8 月开始急剧减少蜂群重量,并在季节结束时减少个体蜜蜂的脂肪储备,这两者都是蜂群越冬失败的预测指标。饲料供应和蜂群营养状况的模式表明,后期的下降是由于在饲料极为有限的时期食物短缺造成的。为了测试栖息地改善是否可以缓解这种反应,我们进行了一项单独的实验,在实验中,为蜜蜂提供了访问本地多年生植物(即草原)的机会,这些蜜蜂既没有体重减轻,也没有脂肪储备减少,这表明在这些农业景观中观察到的快速下降并非不可避免。总的来说,这些结果表明,集约化农业地区可以提供短期的盛宴,但不能维持蜂群的长期营养健康;将生物多样性重新融入这些景观可能会缓解营养压力。