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2.41: Perspective: Pollinators and People

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    21023
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    Pollinators, People, and the Planet

    Jennifer Marshman, PhD, RN, is at the Laurier Center for Sustainable Food Systems at Wilfrid Laurier University.

    D. Susan Willis Chan, PhD, is at the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of Guelph.

    Learning Outcomes

    After reading and discussing this text, students should be able to:

    • Describe pollination and name several bee species.
    • Discover that there are diverse species that provide pollination services .
    • Reframe pollination as a product of diversity.
    • Recognize that a healthy relationship between people and bees is one of reciprocity.

    Introduction

    Humans depend on the cultivation of a wide variety of crops for their food, fuel, fibre, medicines, and cultural expression[1]. Some crops are wind pollinated (grains, many nuts) but many require pollinationby animals, including insectssuch as bees. A biological imperative of living organisms is to reproduce—to create offspring for the next generation. Without this, species would simply cease to exist. In plants, reproduction involves passing genetic material through pollen to ovules[2] to set seeds, which may stimulate the production of fruit.

    The diversity of plants is reflected in the diversity of animals that pollinate them including bees, wasps, flies, beetles, moths, butterflies, birds, bats, or other small mammals. Humans consume a large variety of seeds and fruit, some of which are produced and eaten globally (coffee, mango, avocado, tomato, cucumber, squash, apple, strawberry, pear, melons), and some of which are more regional (feijoa, durian, kiwano, cherimoya). Although the diversity of animals that acts as pollinators in natural systems is extensive, agricultural systems, where most human food is produced, are disproportionately dependent on a single group of insects: bees.

    Bees pollinate plants by inadvertently transferring pollen between the sexual organs of plants (male stamens and female pistils) as they visit flowers to collect their food. Like humans, bees fuel their activities, maintain their physiological processes, mature sexually, and feed their offspring through nutrients consumed as food. For bees, the essential nutrients (carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals) are consumed in the form of pollen, nectar, and oils. Both plants and animals have coevolved a complex system of rewards, deterrents, deceptive manipulation, and structural elements that make the system work to the advantage of all involved[3].

    Some bee species are more intimately connected to human behaviour than others. When people think of pollinators, they often think of the Western honey bee (Apis mellifera). Humans have a long history with the honey bee, with evidence of honey harvesting as far back as 15,000 years ago[4].The modern human reciprocal connection to honey bees is so strong that there are professional beekeepers who manage honey bees to produce honey and beeswax and to provide crop pollination services, in much the same way as people manage domesticated animals such as cows, sheep, pigs, chickens, and horses.

    Some bees can be considered charismatic microfauna, or species that stimulate action and awareness in humans. For example, the giant panda (which is commonly referred to as charismatic megafauna), has become a well–recognized symbol for the World Wildlife Fund. For insects, bumble bees are often pictured as cute, fuzzy creatures that elicit similar positive responses from people. This intimate human-bee interconnection is deeply felt and forms the basis for the strong reaction to such slogans as “Save the Bees.”

    When people think of bees, theymay have a mental image ofa fuzzy bumble bee. One study, however, found that for many Canadians, the honey bee is something of a stand-in for all bees[5] and has become a symbol for conservation and environmentalism, despite the fact that honey bees in the Americas are more like domesticated animals than wild, native animals, and are not on any formal species-at-risk lists.

    In tropical climates, although they produce far less honey, stingless bees are also managed by beekeepers for their pollination services [6] and to produce honey valued for its medicinal properties.

    tiny Tetragonisca angustula nest with guard bees hovering around the entrance
    Figure 1: Tetragonisca angustula, a small eusocial bee found in Mexico and Central and South America. These photos show guards hovering to protect the nest entrance. Their honey is used for medicinal purposes in Bolivia, Guatemala, Mexico, and Venezuela (Grüter, 2020). These bees are very small, each bee is approximately 5mm long. Photos by J. Marshman (2019).

    Not all bees produce honey. Besides honey bees, bumble bees, and stingless bees, there are other solitary bee species that have longstanding reciprocal relationships with humans, often around the provision of specialized crop pollination services that surpass the efficiency of honey bees[7]. These include:alfalfa leafcutter bees (Megachile rotundata) and alkali bees (Nomia melanderi), both important for alfalfa seed production[8];blue orchard bees (Osmia lignaria), important for orchard crop pollination[9];and squash bees (Eucera [Peponapis] species and Eucera [Xenoglossa] species),which areimportant pollinators of pumpkin and squash[10].

    In these cases, we havea three-way reciprocity with bees. Rather than interacting through a product like honey or beeswax, the primary exchange occurs via a human-grown crop that the bees pollinate. The crop provides forage and provisions—and sometimes sleeping and mating habitat—for the bees, and pollination results in a successful cropfor people.

    Social honey bees are the most abundant bees on Earth, primarily due to the global breeding programs for extensive use in agriculture, and their large colony size: about 100,000 individuals per colony, as compared to 300 individuals per colony for bumble bees, and about 5 offspring per nest for solitary bees.

    The pollination services of honey bees in their constructed, mobile hives have long been thought to be critical for conventional agriculture that relies on large swathes of monocultural crops. However, increasingly, even in commercial systems, the important role of wild bumble bees, solitary bees, and stingless bees is being recognized, in some cases as more important than honey bees[11].

    Commercial beekeepers use the honey bee’s easy mobility and large numbers to deliver commercial pollination services to food crops across the United States. For example, every year in February, about 1.7 million honey bee colonies[12] are taken to California’s Central Valley to pollinate the more than 800,000 acres of almond trees (Figure 2). After almond pollination is complete, the movement of managed honey bees across the United States by commercial beekeepers then continues to cherry, plum, avocado, apple, alfalfa, sunflower, clover, clementines, tangerines, squash, cranberries, and blueberries, across Washington, Texas, Florida, the Dakotas, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Maine (Figure 3).

    rows of flowering almond trees
    Figure 2. Rows on rows of almond trees in bloom in this California almond orchard. Image by Maria Teresa Martínez from Pixabay, Pixabay License.

    Globally, crop pollination has an estimated market value of up to US$577 billion annually, far more than the value of honey. However, the movement of so many bee colonies to crops causes physiological stress to bees. Bees require a varied diet from a wide range of plants, in much the same way as humans need a diversity of foods to maximize nutritional intake. When generalist bees[13] are forced to visit a single crop species instead of visiting a wide range of plants for their food, they, too, may experience reduced nutrition[14]. Furthermore, at pollination hubs such as the California almond crop where millions of colonies are concentrated, pests and diseases are easily spread from one colony to another, and there is increasing evidence of pathogen spillover from managed bees to wild bee species[15].

    truck loaded with honey bee hives in a field
    Figure 3: Commercial honey bee hives being loaded onto a transport truck to move from South Carolina to Maine to pollinate blueberry crops. Image courtesy of Pollinator on Wikimedia Commons, Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Generic license.

    The term colony collapse disorder (CCD) became part of the mainstream narrative during the first decade of the 21st century when entire managed honey bee colonies began to mysteriously disappear from their hives in the United States, baffling beekeepers and scientists alike. Colony collapse disorder has become a catch-all term for all mysterious, undiagnosed deaths of colonies and it is likely that it has many causes. While colony collapse is not currently a significant problem, high rates of seasonal honey bee colony losses, especially in winter, are still of great concern to commercial beekeepers and anyone who enjoys insect-pollinated food.

    Many management practices, including best practices for agricultural pesticide use, often dictate that honey bee colonies should be moved before spraying pesticides or that pesticides should be applied in the evening or early morning when honey bees are not active. These honey bee–centric guidelines do not protect wild bees that nest in or above ground, on or around these sites, and which cannot be moved. Unlike honey bees, many wild bees are active in the early morning or evening and so risk exposure to pesticides if spraying occurs at those times. In addition, there is a growing literature on the negative impacts of pesticide residues at sub-lethal levels for both managed and wild bees.

    Honey bees are also used as surrogates for all bee species in risk assessments of agricultural pesticides, despite the fact that they are highly unusual compared to other bees. This surrogacy approach[16] in risk assessment and best management practices does not consider the unique needs, behaviours, or habitat of native, wild bees, who do not live in mobile hives that can be moved during pesticide application.

    Bee Diversity

    Bees are a vastly diverse group of living organisms, with an estimated 20,000 species that have been identified on Earth—nearly the same number as all the mammal and bird species combined[17]. These diverse bee species also have diverse foraging needs and food preferences. Bees are intimately involved in pollinating roughly 75% of the most productive crops, accounting for 35% of global crop volume[18]. This is where the notion of “one in three bites of food” is derived, which is commonly cited as the contribution of bees to human food crops. While all bees forage on plantsto collect their food, bees vary greatly in biology,behaviour, food and habitat preferences, sometimes based on millenia of coevolution with the plants they feed from and hence, pollinate.

    The differences in social behaviour , food preferences, and living conditions of these myriad species are many—some are social, others semi-social, most are solitary.

    three photos of social and solitary bees drinking nectar from flowers
    Figure 4: [Left] Along with the Western honey bee (Apis mellifera) and stingless bees (Tetragonisca angustula), the common Eastern bumble bee (Bombus impatiens) is an example of a social bee. [Middle] This metallic green sweat bee (Agapostemon virescens) is an example of a semi-social bee and is the official bee of the City of Toronto. [Right] A leaf cutter bee (Megachile) is an example of a solitary bee. Photos: J. Marshman.

    Most bees collect and eatnectar and pollenin unprocessed form. Others, such as honey bees,processnectar into honey and form bee bread from pollen, while still others collect and consume plant oilsinstead of nectar. Not all bees can fly the same distances from their nests to food sources. Honey bees can forage at distances up to 8 kilometers from their hives, whereas bumble bees are restricted to a radius of about a kilometer,and many solitary bees can only access nectar and pollen from plants within a range of 100to 500 metersfrom their nests.This raises further questions about the effects of commercial honey bee migration and introduction of millions of managed honey beecoloniesinto agroecosystems at crop pollination hubs(such as the California almond crop). While evidence is still lacking in this area, the potential for managed honey bees to spread parasites, pathogens, and outcompete native, wild bee speciesin these contextsis clear.

    In terms of nesting sites, s ome bees live in large cavities or constructed hives, others live in the hollow stems of plants or other small cavities, and some bees are nest parasites: instead of making their own nests, they insert their eggs into the nests of other bee species and have no role in provisioning those nest cells, much like the behaviour of cuckoo birds [19] . M ost , however ( about 70%) , build their nests in the ground.

    Pollinators in Peril

    Beyond concerns for the Westernhoney bee, there is evidence that other pollinators are in peril. In North America, of the native bee species with sufficient data to assess, more than half are in decline with nearly one in four at risk of extinction.[20] The emphasis on only a couple of bee species, and the lack of understanding of the diversity of bees, has significant implications for conservation efforts and action campaigns. Unfortunately, due to a lack of research, the extent of threats and population declines in many species is not known.

    In contrast to a positive reciprocal relationship, humans may also contribute to the decline of bee species . This takes place in several ways: by degrading and fragmenting landscapes so that there is less habitat for bees ; by driving climate change that may create inhospitable conditions for bees or the plants that provide them with pollen or nectar ; by inadvertently introducing invasive species, pests, or pathogens, often via managed bees such as honey bees or bumble bees ; and by exposing bees to pesticides used to control pests in crops. [21] Our own food system , which need bees , is also put ting them in peril.

    These anthropogenic pressures may lessen the strength of the reciprocity of the human-bee-crop relationship. Increasingly, humans have become aware of the connection between bees and food and the human role in bee declines. As such, initiativesto address these concerns (e.g.,World Bee Dayand Bee City) are growing in popularity, including increasing and enhancing education and creating pollinator habitat in a wide variety of eco-regions and contexts.

    One example of such an initiative is Bee City(Figure 5). The Bee City movementbegan in the United States in 2012 in Asheville, NC.In2016, it established itself in Toronto, ON, witha growing number of Bee Cities being created each year. As the Americanand Canadian programs expanded, they merged with the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation (June 2018) and Pollinator Partnership Canada (December 2020), respectively.

    To get Bee City certification, municipalities (and First Nations communities in Canada) commit to pollinator education and habitat creation. The ways that each Bee City chooses to do this is determined at the local level. Every Bee City has unique characteristics that help to inform decision-making processes and interventions, making Bee City a truly place-based initiative. For example, municipalities containing a significant amount of agricultural land may focus on different interventions than those with a lot of urban green space or those with primarily residential properties.

    Bee City USA and the Xerces Society banner and logo. Right image shows the Bee City Canada and Pollinator Partnership Canada’s logos
    Figure 5: Bee City logos and the logos from the Xerces Society and Pollinator Partnership.

    Human food systems currently depend on the mobility of one species of bee, the Western honey bee, to pollinate vast swaths of monocultural crops. This is a precarious dependency that has negative outcomes for both bees and humans. Honey bees are stressed by traveling long distances on trucks, and then become exposed to a melting pot of disease and parasites at each stop ( as they mix with other transported colonies ). H umans are also at risk, potentially losing all crop pollination services should this single species collapse under a devastating disease or disorder such as colony collapse disorder (CCD) .

    A better approach would be to recognize the value of the diverse pool of insect pollinators available to pollinate crops and then create systems that support those insect pollinators in the localized areas where they are needed. This includes protection from exposure to pesticides and maintaining flowering plants outside of the period when the crop needs to be pollinated. T he very cropping systems that depend upon pollinators thus have the potential to support those pollinators or to harm them , depending on whether humans regard pollinator diversity in the context of reciprocity or resource exploitation. True r eciproc ity requires adjustment , but provides long – term sustainability to the plant systems that humans and bees alike depend on for food .

    Discussion Questions

    • What are some of the ways that you benefit directly or indirectly from pollination?
    • What are some of the key differences between managed honey bees and native, wild bees?
    • Why might using honey bees as surrogates in best practice guidelines for things like pesticide application be problematic?
    • What are three reasons that bringing awareness to native, wild bee species is important?

    References

    Barrowclough, G. F., Cracraft, J., Klicka, J., Zink, R.M. (2016). How Many Kinds of Birds Are There and Why Does It Matter? PLoS ONE, 11(11), p. e0166307. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166307

    Bohart, George E. (1958). Alfalfa Pollinators with Special Reference to Species Other than Honey Bees. Proceedings from the 10th International Congress of Entomology, 4, 929-937.

    Burgin, C. J., Colella, J. P., Kahn, P. L., & Upham, N. S. (2018). How many species of mammals are there? Journal of Mammalogy, 99(1), 1-14.

    Franklin, E. L., & Raine, N. E. (2019). Moving beyond honey bee-centric pesticide risk assessments to protect all pollinators. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 3: 1373–1375.

    Garibaldi, L. A., Steffan-Dewenter, I., Winfree, R., Aizen, M. A., Bommarco, R., Cunningham, S. A., … Klein, A. M. (2013). Wild pollinators enhance fruit set of crops regardless of honey bee abundance. Science, 339(6127), 1608-1611. https://www.doi.org/10.1126/science.1230200

    Greenleaf, S. S., & Kremen, C. (2006). Wild bees enhance honey bees’ pollination of hybrid sunflower. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 103(37), 13890-13895. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0600929103

    Grüter, C. (2020). Stingless Bees: Their Behaviour, Ecology and Evolution. Switzerland: Springer Nature.

    IPBES (2016). The assessment report of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services on pollinators, pollination and food production. (S. G. Potts, V. L. Imperatriz-Fonseca, & H. T. Ngo, Eds.) Bonn, Germany: Secretariat of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. 552 pages. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3402856

    Klein, A.-M., Vaissière, B. E., Cane, J. H., Steffan-Dewenter, I., Cunningham, S. A., Kremen, C., & Tscharntke, T. (2007). Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops. Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 274(1608), 303-313. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2006.3721

    Kleinman, D. L., & Suryanarayanan, S. (2013). Dying bees and the social production of ignorance. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 38(4), 492-517.

    Kopek, K.; Burd, L. (2017). Pollinators in Peril: A Systematic Status Review of North American and Hawaiian Native Bees.

    Marshman, J. (2019). Communing with bees: A whole-of-community approach to address crisis in the Anthropocene. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, 9(A), 87-110.

    Marshman, J., Blay-Palmer, A., & Landman, K. (2019). Anthropocene crisis: climate change, pollinators, and food security. Environments, 6(2), 22.

    McGrady, C. M., Troyer, R., & Fleischer, S. J. (2020). Wild bee visitation rates exceed pollination thresholds in commercial Cucurbita agroecosystems. Journal of Economic Entomology, 113(2), 562-574. https://doi.org/10.1093/jee/toz295

    Otterstatter M.C. & Thomson, J.D. (2008) Does pathogen spillover from commercially reared bumble bees threaten wild pollinators? PLoS ONE 3(7): e2771. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002771

    Rader, R., Bartomeus, I., Garibaldi, L. A., Garratt, M. P. D., Howlett, B. G., Winfree, R., … Woyciechowski, M. (2016). Non-bee insects are important contributors to global crop pollination. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(1), 146-151. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1517092112

    St. Clair, A. L., Zhang, G., Dolezal, A. G., O’Neal, M. E., & Toth, A. L. (2020). Diversified farming in a monoculture landscape: Effects on honey bee health and wild bee communities. Environmental entomology, 49(3), 753-764.

    Tepedino, V. J. (1981). The Pollination efficiency of the squash bee (Peponapis pruinosa) and the honey bee (Apis mellifera) on summer squash (Cucurbita pepo). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, 54(2), 359-377.

    The Canadian Encyclopedia. (2006). Beekeeping. Retrieved online February 2021 from

    USDA. (2018). Pollinating Insect-Biology, Management, Systematics Research: Logan, UT.

    van Vierssen Trip, N., MacPhail, V. J., Colla, S. R., & Olivastri, B. (2020). Examining the public’s awareness of bee (Hymenoptera: Apoidae: Anthophila) conservation in Canada. Conservation Science and Practice, 2(12), e293.

    Willis Chan, D. S., Prosser, R. S., Rodríguez-Gil, J. L., & Raine, N. E. (2019). Assessment of risk to hoary squash bees (Peponapis pruinosa) and other ground-nesting bees from systemic insecticides in agricultural soil. Scientific Reports, 9, 11870. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-47805-1

    Willis Chan, D. S. and N. E. Raine. (2021). Population decline in a ground-nesting solitary squash bee (Eucera pruinosa) following exposure to a neonicotinoid insecticide treated crop (Cucurbita pepo). Sci Reports XXX. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-41021-83341-41597

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    1. See the assessment report of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services on pollinators, pollination, and food production (2016).
    2. The ovules are plant structures that form seeds when they are fertilized.
    3. Rewards include nectar, pollen, or oils that attract pollinators; deterrents include flower shapes that admit some pollinators but not others; deceptive manipulation includes the production of foul smells that attract flies as pollinators; structural elements include pollen packages or hidden pollen that is only accessible when bees behave in a certain way.
    4. See The Canadian Encyclopedia 2006.
    5. See van Vierssen Trip et al. 2020.
    6. Pollination services is a term often used to describe the services provided by managed bees or wild bees as they interact with flowers and move pollen from male to female flower parts. Pollination services aid in plant reproduction (i.e. seed set) in both wild and crop plants.
    7. See Greenleaf & Kremen 2006; Garibaldi et al. 2013.
    8. See Bohart 1958; USDA 2018.
    9. See Woodcock 2012.
    10. See Willis Chan et al. 2019; Willis Chan & Raine 2021; Tepedino 1981; McGrady 2020.
    11. See Garibaldi et al. 2013.
    12. A managed honey bee colony can range from 30,000 to 100,000 bees.
    13. Most bees fall into two categories of pollen preferences: generalists and specialists. Generalist’s pollen needs are not restricted to a specific flower host, whereas specialist bees have coevolved with a specific plant or plants to feed only from those flowers.
    14. See St. Clair et al. 2020; Klein et al. 2007.
    15. See Otterstatter & Thomson 2008.
    16. Franklin & Raine 2019, 1.
    17. See Barrowclough et al. 2016; Burgin et al. 2018.
    18. See Klein et al. 2007.
    19. The common cuckoo bird is a brood parasite, meaning that it uses the nests of other bird species to lay eggs to be incubated (and later fed) by the host bird.
    20. See Kopec & Burd 2017.
    21. See IPBES 2016.

    This page titled 2.41: Perspective: Pollinators and People is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by D. Susan Willis Chan & Jennifer Marshman (eCampus Ontario) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.