Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators

Abstract Pollination services across rural–urban gradients may vary as land cover and other environmental attributes differentially influence pollinators. Most studies examining crop pollination, however, have been conducted in rural environments, while research in urban areas has lagged behind desp...

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Main Authors: Kyla D. Schulte, Caleb J. Wilson, Anna Tawril, Mary A. Jamieson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70133
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author Kyla D. Schulte
Caleb J. Wilson
Anna Tawril
Mary A. Jamieson
author_facet Kyla D. Schulte
Caleb J. Wilson
Anna Tawril
Mary A. Jamieson
author_sort Kyla D. Schulte
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Pollination services across rural–urban gradients may vary as land cover and other environmental attributes differentially influence pollinators. Most studies examining crop pollination, however, have been conducted in rural environments, while research in urban areas has lagged behind despite growing interest in urban agriculture. In this study, we hypothesized that increased urbanization would alter pollinator community composition due to a reduction in natural areas within the surrounding landscape, potentially decreasing pollinator abundance. To evaluate this hypothesis, we conducted a three‐year study using strawberries as a focal study crop. We characterized the abundance, diversity, and community composition of bees across 10 farms along a rural–urban gradient in Michigan, USA. Across sites and years, we found that urbanization, measured as impervious surface cover, had no consistent effect on overall bee abundance and diversity. However, urbanization differentially influenced certain taxa, namely, Halictini which was positively associated with more urban environments in year one and Ceratinini which was negatively associated with more urban environments in year three. Sweat bees and small carpenter bees were the most frequent strawberry flower visitors across sites and years, although honey bees were dominant at rural sites in year one. We observed 61 bee species visiting strawberry flowers, most commonly Lasioglossum, Ceratina, and Augochlorella species. Most bee species were generalist foragers that visited many flower species within each site. Variation in strawberry floral visitors across years appeared to be driven by shifts in flower phenology, especially in year one when flowering was delayed due to the practice of flower removal to increase yield. Our study demonstrates the importance of wild bees, especially native species, as pollinators in urban agriculture and illustrates how habitat context shapes bee communities.
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spelling doaj-art-590c22dd229b4ddda60d9ee7220a97cb2025-01-30T01:44:38ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252025-01-01161n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.70133Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinatorsKyla D. Schulte0Caleb J. Wilson1Anna Tawril2Mary A. Jamieson3Department of Biological Sciences Oakland University Rochester Michigan USADepartment of Biological Sciences Oakland University Rochester Michigan USADepartment of Biological Sciences Oakland University Rochester Michigan USADepartment of Biological Sciences Oakland University Rochester Michigan USAAbstract Pollination services across rural–urban gradients may vary as land cover and other environmental attributes differentially influence pollinators. Most studies examining crop pollination, however, have been conducted in rural environments, while research in urban areas has lagged behind despite growing interest in urban agriculture. In this study, we hypothesized that increased urbanization would alter pollinator community composition due to a reduction in natural areas within the surrounding landscape, potentially decreasing pollinator abundance. To evaluate this hypothesis, we conducted a three‐year study using strawberries as a focal study crop. We characterized the abundance, diversity, and community composition of bees across 10 farms along a rural–urban gradient in Michigan, USA. Across sites and years, we found that urbanization, measured as impervious surface cover, had no consistent effect on overall bee abundance and diversity. However, urbanization differentially influenced certain taxa, namely, Halictini which was positively associated with more urban environments in year one and Ceratinini which was negatively associated with more urban environments in year three. Sweat bees and small carpenter bees were the most frequent strawberry flower visitors across sites and years, although honey bees were dominant at rural sites in year one. We observed 61 bee species visiting strawberry flowers, most commonly Lasioglossum, Ceratina, and Augochlorella species. Most bee species were generalist foragers that visited many flower species within each site. Variation in strawberry floral visitors across years appeared to be driven by shifts in flower phenology, especially in year one when flowering was delayed due to the practice of flower removal to increase yield. Our study demonstrates the importance of wild bees, especially native species, as pollinators in urban agriculture and illustrates how habitat context shapes bee communities.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70133agroecologybeecommunity ecologyplant‐pollinator networkspollinatorstrawberry
spellingShingle Kyla D. Schulte
Caleb J. Wilson
Anna Tawril
Mary A. Jamieson
Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
Ecosphere
agroecology
bee
community ecology
plant‐pollinator networks
pollinator
strawberry
title Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
title_full Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
title_short Spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
title_sort spatiotemporal variability and functional redundancy obscure effects of urbanization on strawberry pollinators
topic agroecology
bee
community ecology
plant‐pollinator networks
pollinator
strawberry
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70133
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AT calebjwilson spatiotemporalvariabilityandfunctionalredundancyobscureeffectsofurbanizationonstrawberrypollinators
AT annatawril spatiotemporalvariabilityandfunctionalredundancyobscureeffectsofurbanizationonstrawberrypollinators
AT maryajamieson spatiotemporalvariabilityandfunctionalredundancyobscureeffectsofurbanizationonstrawberrypollinators