Getting more Power from Your Flowers : Multi-Functional Flower Strips Enhance Pollinators and Pest Control Agents in Apple Orchards

Campbell, Alistair and Wilby, Andrew and Sutton, Peter and Wackers, Felix Leopold (2017) Getting more Power from Your Flowers : Multi-Functional Flower Strips Enhance Pollinators and Pest Control Agents in Apple Orchards. Insects, 8 (3): 101. ISSN 2075-4450

[thumbnail of insects_221945_accepted_version]
Preview
PDF (insects_221945_accepted_version)
insects_221945_accepted_version.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial.

Download (698kB)

Abstract

Flower strips are commonly recommended to boost biodiversity and multiple ecosystem services (e.g. pollination and pest control) on farmland. However, significant knowledge gaps remain regards the extent to which they deliver on these aims. Here, we tested the efficacy of flower strips that targeted different subsets of beneficial arthropods (pollinators and natural enemies) and their ecosystem services in cider apple orchards. Treatments included mixes that specifically targeted: 1) pollinators (‘concealed-nectar plants’); 2) natural enemies (‘open-nectar plants’); or 3) or both groups concurrently (i.e. ‘multi-functional’ mix). Flower strips were established in alleyways of four orchards and compared to control alleyways (no flowers). Pollinator (e.g. bees) and natural enemy (e.g. parasitoid wasps, predatory flies and beetles) visitation to flower strips, alongside measures of pest control (aphid colony densities, sentinel prey predation), and fruit production, were monitored in orchards over two consecutive growing seasons. Targeted flower strips attracted either pollinators or natural enemies, whereas mixed flower strips attracted both groups in similar abundance to targeted mixes. Natural enemy densities on apple trees were higher in plots containing open-nectar plants compared to other treatments, but effects were stronger for non-aphidophagous taxa. Predation of sentinel prey was enhanced in all flowering plots compared to controls but pest aphid densities and fruit yield were unaffected by flower strips. We conclude that ‘multi-functional’ flower strips that contain flowering plant species with opposing floral traits can provide nectar and pollen for both pollinators and natural enemies, but further work is required to understand their potential for improving pest control services and yield in cider apple orchards.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Insects
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1100
Subjects:
?? agroecologyecological intensificationagri-environment schemesfloral traits36 conservation biological controlecosystem servicesbeneficial arthropodsagricultural and biological sciences(all)insect sciencediscipline-based research ??
ID Code:
87770
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
14 Sep 2017 12:42
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
31 Dec 2023 00:51