The winners and losers of land use intensification: pollinator community disassembly is non-random and alters functional diversity

Rader, Romina, Bartomeus, Ignasi, Tylianakis, Jason M., and Laliberté, Etienne (2014) The winners and losers of land use intensification: pollinator community disassembly is non-random and alters functional diversity. Diversity and Distributions, 20 (8). pp. 908-917.

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Abstract

Aim: Pollination services are at risk from land use change and intensification, but responses of individual pollinator species are often variable, making it difficult to detect and understand community-level impacts on pollination. We investigated changes in community composition and functional diversity of insect pollinator communities under land use change in a highly modified landscape.

Location: Canterbury region, South Island, New Zealand.

Methods: We trapped insect pollinators every month for 1 year at 24 sites across four land use types of increasing intensity in New Zealand: gardens with native vegetation, blackcurrant orchards, dairy farms, and rotational cropping farms. We investigated changes in pollinator species and functional richness and differences in species and functional composition.

Results: Under increasing land use intensity, both species and functional richness declined markedly. Changes in functional richness, however, were overall not significantly different than expected based on the observed declines in species richness. Nevertheless, there was a significant trend towards greater than expected functional richness within less-intensive land use types and lower than expected functional richness within intensive land use types. The order of species loss under increasing land use intensity was non-random, as pollinators with a narrow diet breadth, large body size, solitary behaviour and a preference for non-floral larval food resources were lost first.

Main conclusions: Our study shows that pollinator species bearing particular trait attributes are susceptible to differences in land use. Our study suggests that pollination services may be more vulnerable to environmental changes and disturbances in more intensive land use types as a result of lower pollinator functional richness.

Item ID: 36240
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1472-4642
Keywords: agriculture, agro-ecosystem, bees, biodiversity, crop, ecosystem function, functional richness, functional traits, land use change, pollination
Funders: James Cook University, New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research, New Zealand Entomological Society (NZES), Royal Society of New Zealand, Australian Research Council (ARC)
Projects and Grants: NZES 21st Anniversary Grant, ARC DECRA (DE120100352)
Date Deposited: 12 Nov 2014 10:56
Downloads: Total: 3
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