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Oct192022

Pollinators of the Great Plains: Disturbances, Stressors, Management, and Research Needs #pollinators #grasslands #rxfire #grazing

"Pollinators of the Great Plains: Disturbances, Stressors, Management, and Research Needs"

This open access article was published online September 16, 2020, in the journal Rangeland Ecology and Management.

Access the article through the permanent web address (DOI) (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2020.08.006)

Abstract

Recent global declines of pollinator populations have highlighted the importance of pollinators, which are undervalued despite essential contributions to ecosystem services. To identify critical knowledge gaps about pollinators, we describe the state of knowledge about responses of pollinators and their foraging and nesting resources to historical natural disturbances and new stressors in Great Plains grasslands and riparian ecosystems. In addition, we also provide information about pollinator management and research needs to guide efforts to sustain pollinators and by extension, flowering vegetation, and other ecosystem services of grasslands.

Although pollinator responses varied, pollinator specialists of disturbance-sensitive plants tended to decline in response to disturbance. Management with grazing and fire overall may benefit pollinators of grasslands, depending on many factors; however, we recommend habitat and population monitoring to assess outcomes of these disturbances on small, isolated pollinator populations.

The influences and interactions of drought and increasingly variable weather patterns, pesticides, and domesticated bees on pollinators are complex and understudied. Nonetheless, habitat management and restoration can reduce effects of stressors and augment floral and nesting resources for pollinators.

Research needs include expanding information about 1) the distribution, abundance, trends, and intraregional variability of most pollinator species; 2) floral and nesting resources critical to support pollinators; 3) implications of different rangeland management approaches; 4) effects of missing and reestablished resources in altered and restored vegetation; and 5) disentangling the relative influence of interacting disturbances and stressors on pollinator declines.

Despite limited research in the Great Plains on many of these topics, consideration of pollinator populations and their habitat needs in management plans is critical now to reduce future pollinator declines and promote recovery.

Keywords: climate; fire; grazing; Great Plains; herbivory; pesticides; pollinators

Citation

Hanberry, Brice B., Sandra J. DeBano, Thomas N. Kaye, Mary M. Rowland, Cynthia R. Hartway, and Donna Shorrock. "Pollinators of the Great Plains: disturbances, stressors, management, and research needs." Rangeland Ecology & Management 78 (2021): 220-234.


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