Pollinator visits to six plant species in an oil palm landscape
Pollination sustains biodiversity and food security, but pollinators are threatened by habitat degradation, fragmentation and loss. Here we aimed to assess how remaining forests influence bee visits to flowers in an oil palm dominated landscape in Borneo, Indonesia. To do this, we observed pollinator visits to six plant species: four crops (Capsicum frutescens L. “chili”; Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai “watermelon”; Solanum lycopersicum L. “tomato”; and Solanum melongena L. “eggplant”); one native plant Melastoma malabathricum L. “melastome”; and the exotic Turnera subulata Smith “turnera”. We made one local grid-based and one landscape scale transect-based study spanning to 208 m and 2,130 m from forest, respectively. We recorded a total of 1,535 pollinator visits to 4,831 flowers in 1,046 ten-minute observation periods, with bee visits making up 81.4% of these visits. We observed an overall mean of 0.23 and 0.34 bee visits per flower per ten-minute period for the grid-based and transect studies, respectively. C. lanatus had the highest observed visitation frequency (0.62 visits per flower per ten-minute period) while S. lycopersicum had no observed visits. The dataset includes raw data collected in the field from 22 July – 29 October 2017.
Main Authors: | Power, Candice C., Nielsen, Anders, Sheil, Douglas |
---|---|
Format: | Dataset biblioteca |
Published: |
Aarhus University
|
Subjects: | agricultural landscape, remnant forests, visitation frequency, wild pollinators, |
Online Access: | https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/pollinator-visits-to-six-plant-species-in-an-oil-palm-landscape |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
High Pollination Deficit and Strong Dependence on Honeybees in Pollination of Korla Fragrant Pear, Pyrus sinkiangensis
by: Li, Qian, et al. -
Body size as a proxy of probing time and visitation rates on cucumber by two African stingless bees increase fruit quality and seed quantity
by: Kiatoko, Nkoba, et al. -
Different landscape features within a simplified agroecosystem support diverse pollinators and their service to crop plants
by: Fijen, Thijs P.M., et al. -
Stability of pollination services decreases with isolation from natural areas despite honey bee visits
by: Garibaldi, Lucas Alejandro, et al. -
Precarious conservation status of Pilgerodendron uviferum forests in their northern distribution in the Chilean Coastal Range
by: Soto,Daniel P, et al.
Published: (2019-06-12T02:00:03Z)