Urbanowicz Christine, Muñiz Paige A, McArt Scott H
Department of Entomology Cornell University Ithaca NY USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jun 17;10(13):6741-6751. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6417. eCollection 2020 Jul.
Introduced plants may be important foraging resources for honey bees and wild pollinators, but how often and why pollinators visit introduced plants across an entire plant community is not well understood. Understanding the importance of introduced plants for pollinators could help guide management of these plants and conservation of pollinator habitat. We assessed how floral abundance and pollinator preference influence pollinator visitation rate and diversity on 30 introduced versus 24 native plants in central New York. Honey bees visited introduced and native plants at similar rates regardless of floral abundance. In contrast, as floral abundance increased, wild pollinator visitation rate decreased more strongly for introduced plants than native plants. Introduced plants as a group and native plants as a group did not differ in bee diversity or preference, but honey bees and wild pollinators preferred different plant species. As a case study, we then focused on knapweed ( spp.), an introduced plant that was the most preferred plant by honey bees, and that beekeepers value as a late-summer foraging resource. We compared the extent to which honey bees versus wild pollinators visited knapweed relative to coflowering plants, and we quantified knapweed pollen and nectar collection by honey bees across 22 New York apiaries. Honey bees visited knapweed more frequently than coflowering plants and at a similar rate as all wild pollinators combined. All apiaries contained knapweed pollen in nectar, 86% of apiaries contained knapweed pollen in bee bread, and knapweed was sometimes a main pollen or nectar source for honey bees in late summer. Our results suggest that because of diverging responses to floral abundance and preferences for different plants, honey bees and wild pollinators differ in their use of introduced plants. Depending on the plant and its abundance, removing an introduced plant may impact honey bees more than wild pollinators.
外来引入植物可能是蜜蜂和野生传粉者重要的觅食资源,但传粉者在整个植物群落中访问外来引入植物的频率及原因,目前还不太清楚。了解外来引入植物对传粉者的重要性,有助于指导对这些植物的管理以及传粉者栖息地的保护。我们评估了在纽约中部,花卉丰富度和传粉者偏好如何影响30种外来引入植物和24种本土植物上的传粉者访花率及多样性。无论花卉丰富度如何,蜜蜂访问外来引入植物和本土植物的频率相似。相比之下,随着花卉丰富度增加,外来引入植物上野生传粉者的访花率下降幅度比本土植物更大。外来引入植物群体和本土植物群体在蜜蜂多样性或偏好方面没有差异,但蜜蜂和野生传粉者偏好不同的植物种类。作为一个案例研究,我们随后聚焦于矢车菊(属),一种外来引入植物,它是蜜蜂最喜欢的植物,并且养蜂人将其视为夏末的觅食资源。我们比较了蜜蜂和野生传粉者访问矢车菊相对于同期开花植物的程度,并在纽约州的22个养蜂场量化了蜜蜂采集矢车菊花粉和花蜜的情况。蜜蜂访问矢车菊的频率高于同期开花植物,且与所有野生传粉者访问频率之和相近。所有养蜂场的花蜜中都含有矢车菊花粉,86%的养蜂场的蜂粮中含有矢车菊花粉,矢车菊有时是夏末蜜蜂的主要花粉或花蜜来源。我们的结果表明,由于对花卉丰富度的反应不同以及对不同植物的偏好不同,蜜蜂和野生传粉者对外来引入植物的利用存在差异。根据植物及其丰富度,去除一种外来引入植物对蜜蜂的影响可能比对野生传粉者更大。