Journal article

Plant traits and landscape simplification drive intraspecific trait diversity of Bombus terrestris in wildflower plantings


Authors listGrass, I; Albrecht, J; Farwig, N; Jauker, F

Publication year2021

Pages91-101

JournalBasic and Applied Ecology

Volume number57

ISSN1439-1791

eISSN1618-0089

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2021.10.002

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Wildflower plantings are an important mitigation tool within agri-environmental schemes to counter insect decline in resource-scarce agricultural landscapes. Effectiveness of wildflower plantings for insect conservation is typically studied at the community or species level. It is the individual, however, that is subject to changing abiotic and biotic conditions, not the species per se. Accordingly, functional traits of individuals, i.e., the intraspecific functional diversity within species, likely mediate responses to wildflower resources and landscape context. Here we focused on the ecologically and economically important wild insect pollinator Bombus terrestris to study its intraspecific functional diversity and plant-pollinator individual interactions in wildflower plantings. We found considerable trait variation among flower-visiting B. terrestris workers. Locally, this variation could be attributed to flowering plant traits, with larger workers visiting larger inflorescences and individuals with longer tongues preferentially feeding on zygomorphic but not radially symmetrical flowers. In addition, wildflower plantings with high floral abundance attracted individuals with larger pollen baskets. At the landscape scale, increasing proportion of arable land resulted in smaller B. terrestris individuals in wildflower plantings, and a decrease in the overall size diversity of workers. These findings highlight the so far little considered role of intraspecific variation in functional traits of wild pollinators, which can mediate the trait-matching between plants and pollinator individuals. Landscape simplification from agriculture threatens intraspecific pollinator diversity, with potential harmful effects for pollinator fitness and plant reproduction. Tailored wildflower plantings can thus serve as an important tool to increase intraspecific variation in simplified landscapes. When designing seed mixtures for these plantings, high complementarity in plant traits is key for promoting high intraspecific trait diversity of bumblebees and potentially of other associated insect species. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH on behalf of Gesellschaft fur Okologie.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGrass, I., Albrecht, J., Farwig, N. and Jauker, F. (2021) Plant traits and landscape simplification drive intraspecific trait diversity of Bombus terrestris in wildflower plantings, Basic and Applied Ecology, 57, pp. 91-101. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2021.10.002

APA Citation styleGrass, I., Albrecht, J., Farwig, N., & Jauker, F. (2021). Plant traits and landscape simplification drive intraspecific trait diversity of Bombus terrestris in wildflower plantings. Basic and Applied Ecology. 57, 91-101. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2021.10.002



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