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Mass-flowering crops: cost or benefit to bumblebees and wild flower pollination?
Reference
BBS/E/C/00004824
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Juliet Osborne
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution
Rothamsted Research
Department
Rothamsted Research Department
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
103,857
Status
Completed
Type
Institute Project
Start date
01/11/2006
End date
01/04/2010
Duration
41 months
Abstract
The overarching aim of this project is to evaluate how mass- flowering crops, pollinators and wildflowers interact in arable ecosystems. Specific objectives of this project: A Determine whether mass-flowering crops affect the growth of colonies of long and short-tongued bumblebee species in arable farmland, and whether colony growth is limited by availability of forage at particular times in the season. B Determine whether mass-flowering crops have a competitive or facilitatory effect on pollination and seed-set of selected field-margin and hedgerow wildflowers varying in floral morphology and phenology, which are growing in the vicinity. C Use a GIS-based forage map and associated model to predict first, how the distribution and phenology of both mass- flowering crops and wildflowers in the landscape determine pollinator abundance and, in particular which areas act as sinks and which act as sources for bumblebees (net exporters of queens) for two bumblebee species, B. pascuorum and B. lapidarius and second, the impact of mass forage crops on the viability of wildflower populations.
Summary
unavailable
Committee
Closed Committee - Agri-food (AF)
Research Topics
Crop Science, Plant Science
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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