Pollination service delivery for European crops: Challenges and opportunities
Date
2016Abstract
Crop pollination by bees has long been recognized as an ecosystem service of huge economic value; a large number
of food crops depend upon pollination. Features across landscapes that are important for pollination delivery
include: nesting habitats, floral resource availability at foraging distance, and climate. The conditions for
presence/absence of pollinators are therefore complex and rely upon a combination of biotic and abiotic factors.
To date there has been no easily available method for landowners to determine the potential of pollination
delivery across the land effectively and rapidly. In this paper we develop a method that uses freely available
datasets to remotely estimate the relative provision of pollination service delivery provided by bees across
Europe at a 300 m-pixel resolution. We then identify the potential pollination delivery and efficiency across
Europe at country and regional level. This study illustrates an approach that obtains a first approximation for
land managers to identify potential areas across landscapes to protect in order to enhance pollination service
delivery.