Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, Al. Adama Mickiewicza 33, 31-120, Kraków, Poland.
BMC Plant Biol. 2021 Oct 30;21(1):500. doi: 10.1186/s12870-021-03282-1.
Strawberries are a common crop whose yield success depends on the availability of pollinators. Invasive alien plants, such as Impatiens glandulifera and I. parviflora, are also attractive for bees and hoverflies, respectively, and occur in close proximity to strawberry cultivation areas. The aim of the study was to test whether alien plants may decrease pollination of strawberry cultivation. However, even if the pollinators are abundant, efficiency of their pollination may decrease as a result of revisits of flowers that were already probed. It is addressed by pollinators by scent marking. Moreover, such revisits can be determined by nectar replenishment, which may occur rapidly in nectar-rich flowers. We studied revisits to I. glandulifera by bumblebees and defined the factors that influence the probability of revisits (air temperature; pollinator species; family caste and size; flower area; sun radiation; and time of day).
We found that the two alien species decreased the number of pollinators visiting strawberries. Apoidea, Bombini and Syrphidae significantly decreased on Fragaria × ananassa when alien Impatiens were present. We also revealed the influence of increasing air temperature on bumblebee foraging, which was particularly significant for female workers. At very high temperatures (> 37°C), bumblebee males revisited probed flowers less often than female workers.
Our results demonstrate that in experimental conditions attractive alien species decrease pollination of strawberries, which may negatively affect production of this crop. Although the results have not been verified in real-life strawberry fields yet, we recommend that alien plant species that share the same pollinators and occur in close proximity of strawberries are controlled. Moreover, we found that revisits of probed flowers may weaken feeding efficiency of bumblebees. If revisits are not induced by nectar replenishment, then global warming may pose a serious threat to the survival of colonies, which may have consequences also for the plants that attract them, e.g., for strawberries.
草莓是一种常见的作物,其产量的成功取决于传粉者的可用性。入侵的外来植物,如蔓马缨丹和小花蔓泽兰,分别对蜜蜂和食蚜蝇具有吸引力,并且与草莓种植区紧密相邻。本研究的目的是测试外来植物是否会降低草莓种植的授粉。然而,即使传粉者充足,由于花朵已经被探测过,它们的授粉效率也可能会下降。这是由传粉者通过气味标记来解决的。此外,这种回访可以通过花蜜补充来确定,而在花蜜丰富的花朵中,花蜜的补充可能会很快发生。我们研究了熊蜂对蔓马缨丹的回访,并确定了影响回访概率的因素(空气温度;传粉者物种;蜂群的等级和大小;花朵面积;太阳辐射;和一天中的时间)。
我们发现,这两个外来物种减少了访问草莓的传粉者数量。当有外来蔓马缨丹存在时,Apoidea、Bombini 和 Syrphidae 对草莓属草莓的访问显著减少。我们还揭示了空气温度升高对熊蜂觅食的影响,这对雌性工蜂尤其显著。在非常高的温度(>37°C)下,雄性熊蜂比雌性工蜂更不常回访已探测到的花朵。
我们的结果表明,在实验条件下,有吸引力的外来物种会降低草莓的授粉,这可能会对这种作物的产量产生负面影响。尽管这些结果尚未在现实生活中的草莓田中得到验证,但我们建议控制与草莓共享相同传粉者且紧密相邻的外来植物物种。此外,我们发现探测过的花朵的回访可能会削弱熊蜂的觅食效率。如果回访不是由花蜜补充引起的,那么全球变暖可能会对蜂群的生存构成严重威胁,这也可能对吸引它们的植物产生影响,例如草莓。