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Research article2016Peer reviewed

Large-scale pollination experiment demonstrates the importance of insect pollination in winter oilseed rape

Lindström, Sandra; Herbertsson, Lina; Rundlöf, Maj; Smith, Henrik G.; Bommarco, Riccardo

Abstract

Insect pollination, despite its potential to contribute substantially to crop production, is not an integrated part of agronomic planning. A major reason for this are knowledge gaps in the contribution of pollinators to yield, which partly result from difficulties in determining area-based estimates of yield effects from insect pollination under field conditions. We have experimentally manipulated honey bee Apis mellifera densities at 43 oilseed rape Brassica napus fields over 2 years in Scandinavia. Honey bee hives were placed in 22 fields; an additional 21 fields without large apiaries in the surrounding landscape were selected as controls. Depending on the pollination system in the parental generation, the B. napus cultivars in the crop fields are classified as either open-pollinated or first-generation hybrids, with both types being open-pollinated in the generation of plants cultivated in the fields. Three cultivars of each type were grown. We measured the activity of flower-visiting insects during flowering and estimated yields by harvesting with small combine harvesters. The addition of honey bee hives to the fields dramatically increased abundance of flower-visiting honey bees in those fields. Honey bees affected yield, but the effect depended on cultivar type (p = 0.04). Post-hoc analysis revealed that open-pollinated cultivars, but not hybrid cultivars, had 11% higher yields in fields with added honey bees than those grown in the control fields (p = 0.07). To our knowledge, this is the first whole-field study in replicated landscapes to assess the benefit of insect pollination in oilseed rape. Our results demonstrate that honey bees have the potential to increase oilseed rape yields, thereby emphasizing the importance of pollinator management for optimal cultivation of oilseed rape.

Keywords

Brassica napus; Crop pollination; Crop yield; Cultivar; Honey bees

Published in

Oecologia
2016, Volume: 180, number: 3, pages: 759-769
Publisher: SPRINGER

      SLU Authors

    • Lindström, Sandra

      • Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
      • Lund University
      • The Rural Economy and Agricultural Societies
      • Associated SLU-program

        SLU Plant Protection Network

        UKÄ Subject classification

        Agricultural Science
        Zoology
        Ecology

        Publication identifier

        DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-015-3517-x

        Permanent link to this page (URI)

        https://res.slu.se/id/publ/78333