Marcacci Gabriel, Grass Ingo, Rao Vikas S, Kumar S Shabarish, Tharini K B, Belavadi Vasuki V, Nölke Nils, Tscharntke Teja, Westphal Catrin
Functional Agrobiodiversity, Department of Crop Sciences, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
Ecology of Tropical Agricultural Systems, University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany.
Ecol Appl. 2022 Dec;32(8):e2699. doi: 10.1002/eap.2699. Epub 2022 Aug 19.
Urbanization poses a major threat to biodiversity and food security, as expanding cities, especially in the Global South, increasingly compete with natural and agricultural lands. However, the impact of urban expansion on agricultural biodiversity in tropical regions is overlooked. Here we assess how urbanization affects the functional response of farmland bees, the most important pollinators for crop production. We sampled bees across three seasons in 36 conventional vegetable-producing farms spread along an urbanization gradient in Bengaluru, an Indian megacity. We investigated how landscape and local environmental drivers affected different functional traits (sociality, nesting behavior, body size, and specialization) and functional diversity (functional dispersion) of bee communities. We found that the functional responses to urbanization were trait specific with more positive than negative effects of gray area (sealed surfaces and buildings) on species richness, functional diversity, and abundance of most functional groups. As expected, larger, solitary, cavity-nesting, and, surprisingly, specialist bees benefited from urbanization. In contrast to temperate cities, the abundance of ground nesters increased in urban areas, presumably because larger patches of bare soil were still available beside roads and buildings. However, overall bee abundance and the abundance of social bees (85% of all bees) decreased with urbanization, threatening crop pollination. Crop diversity promotes taxonomic and functional diversity of bee communities. Locally, flower resources promote the abundance of all functional groups, and natural vegetation can maintain diverse pollinator communities throughout the year, especially during the noncropping season. However, exotic plants decrease functional diversity and bee specialization. To safeguard bees and their pollination services in urban farms, we recommend (1) preserving seminatural vegetation (hedges) around cropping fields to provide nesting opportunities for aboveground nesters, (2) promoting farm-level crop diversification of beneficial crops (e.g., pulses, vegetables, and spices), (3) maintaining native natural vegetation along field margins, and (4) controlling and removing invasive exotic plants that disrupt native plant-pollinator interactions. Overall, our results suggest that urban agriculture can maintain functionally diverse bee communities and, if managed in a sustainable manner, be used to develop win-win solutions for biodiversity conservation of pollinators and food security in and around cities.
城市化对生物多样性和粮食安全构成重大威胁,因为不断扩张的城市,尤其是在全球南方地区,与自然和农业用地的竞争日益激烈。然而,城市扩张对热带地区农业生物多样性的影响却被忽视了。在此,我们评估城市化如何影响农田蜜蜂的功能反应,农田蜜蜂是作物生产中最重要的传粉者。我们在印度大城市班加罗尔沿城市化梯度分布的36个传统蔬菜生产农场中,对三个季节的蜜蜂进行了采样。我们调查了景观和当地环境驱动因素如何影响蜜蜂群落的不同功能特征(社会性、筑巢行为、体型和专业化程度)以及功能多样性(功能离散度)。我们发现,对城市化的功能反应具有性状特异性,灰色区域(密封表面和建筑物)对大多数功能组的物种丰富度、功能多样性和丰度的影响呈正向的多于负向的。正如预期的那样,体型较大、独居、洞穴筑巢的蜜蜂,以及令人惊讶的专业化蜜蜂从城市化中受益。与温带城市不同,城市地区地面筑巢蜜蜂的数量增加,大概是因为道路和建筑物旁仍有较大面积的裸露土壤。然而,随着城市化进程,蜜蜂的总体数量以及社会性蜜蜂(占所有蜜蜂的85%)的数量减少,这对作物授粉构成了威胁。作物多样性促进了蜜蜂群落的分类多样性和功能多样性。在当地,花卉资源促进了所有功能组的数量,而自然植被可以全年维持多样化的传粉者群落,尤其是在非种植季节。然而,外来植物会降低功能多样性和蜜蜂的专业化程度。为了保护城市农场中的蜜蜂及其授粉服务,我们建议:(1)在农田周围保留半自然植被(树篱),为地面以上筑巢的蜜蜂提供筑巢机会;(2)促进农场层面有益作物(如豆类、蔬菜和香料)的作物多样化;(3)维持田间边缘的本地自然植被;(4)控制和清除扰乱本地植物 - 传粉者相互作用的入侵外来植物。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,城市农业可以维持功能多样的蜜蜂群落,如果以可持续的方式进行管理,可用于为城市及其周边地区传粉者的生物多样性保护和粮食安全制定双赢解决方案。