[Pollinator] ARTICLE: Major land use and vegetation influences on potential pollinator communities in the High Plains of Texas (Open Access)
Park, Margaret E
margaret_park at fws.gov
Mon Feb 7 17:51:28 PST 2022
Angela Begosh, Loren M. Smith & Scott T. McMurry, Journal of Insect Conservation, February 4, 2022
Abstract or Summary
In 2016, the annual value of all global crops dependent upon pollination was valued at $ 235–$ 577 billion (US$). Pollination service is threatened by habitat loss, pesticides, and climate change. They collected potential pollinators with blue vane traps in native grasslands, Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) lands, and cropland (land use), and their embedded playa wetlands (land type) in the Southern High Plains of Texas (SHP). They collected vegetation data that included floral cover, floral diversity, native grass cover, introduced grass cover, canopy gap, and duff cover. The objective was to determine if individual vegetation characteristics influenced potential pollinator abundance and richness in addition to land use or land type as a whole. The top model explaining abundance was land use, land type, and floral cover. Floral cover had a positive influence on all land uses. The top model that explained insect richness was land use x floral cover, land type, canopy gap, and duff cover. Floral cover positively influenced insect richness in native grasslands but negatively influenced cropland and CRP richness. Percent of canopy gap had a slight negative influence on insect richness, and duff cover positively influenced richness. The recommendations to land managers are to protect playas to preserve undisturbed areas and native floral resources and seed all future CRP contracts with floral rich plantings to provide for pollinators over the entire growing season.
Implications for insect conservation
The results show that vegetation characteristics shared by all land uses such as floral cover, canopy gap and duff cover influence pollinator abundance and richness. Therefore, conserving playa wetlands and programs such as the CRP have the potential for enhancing pollinator habitat in working landscapes of the SHP of Texas.
Link to article: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10841-022-00380-9
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