Plant-Pollinator Interactions over 120 Years: Loss of Species, Co-Occurrence, and Function
Washington University in St. Louis · Montana State University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Honeybees Can't Do It Alone The majority of food crops require pollination to set fruit with the honeybee providing a pollination workhorse, with both feral and managed populations an integral component of crop management (see the Perspective by Tylianakis , published online 28 February). Garibaldi et al. (p. 1608 , published online 28 February) now show that wild pollinators are also a vital part of our crop systems. In more than 40 important crops grown worldwide, wild pollinators improved pollination efficiency, increasing fruit set by twice that facilitated by honeybees. Burkle et al. (p. 1611 , published online 28 February) took advantage of one of the most thorough and oldest data sets available on…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 155.02
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Pollinator
- Pollination
- Forb
- Understory
- Ecology
- Biology
- Nestedness
- Extant taxon
- Life in Land