Use of alternative pollinators
Honey bees are usually the most widely chosen insects in most managed pollination situations. However, some specialists believe they are not the most efficient pollinators, and could be replaced by alternative pollinators, such as for example, leafcutter and alkalai bees in alfalfa pollination and bumblebees in greenhouses for tomatoes. A wide variety of other bees can be found in the environment that are specialist pollinators. However, most of these alternative insects value as pollinators and their relationships with plants are as yet little known.
Some think that other pollinators will in time replace the lost honeybees, but general pollinator decline was already happening before diseases such as acarine and varroa mites decimated honeybees. Only in a few areas, wild populations of pollinators are building up; in most areas they are declining as badly as honeybees.
Furthermore pollinators cannot be exchanged on a one for one basis. They are not all equal. Some are generalists, some are specialists. Some have long tongues; some short. Bees may deliberately collect pollen, but have different collection techniques, which can greatly affect their efficiency as pollinators.
See also
References
- The Value of Honey Bees As Pollinators of U.S. Crops in 2000, Drs. Roger Morse and Nicholas Calderone of Cornell University (2000) : [1]
- Forgotten Pollinators by Drs. Stephen L. Buchmann and Gary Paul Nabhan is a classic work describing the pollinator crisis. In the vein of Rachel Carson, their opening chapter, "Silent Spring and Fruitless Falls" describes the risk in a nutshell. They go on to illustrate the problem and propose some solutions.
- Many people, even folks in agriculture who should be highly aware of this issue are not. Dr. Malcolm Sanford of the University of Florida has written an important position paper: Pollination, the Forgotten Agricultural Input, which is online at: [1]
- The United Nations Food and Agruculture Organization has also issued a position paper on the subject of pollinator decline: Biological Diversity: Pollinators [1]
- The International Initiative for the Conservation and Sustainable use of Pollinators: A proposal for a plan of action [1]
- Xerces Society Pollinator Conservation Program (North America) [1]
- POLLINATOR BIODIVERSITY A CO-ORDINATED CLOBAL APPROACH (FAO) [1]
- Article in Conservation Ecology: The Economic Impacts of Pollinator Declines: An Approach to Assessing the Consequences [1]
- Brazillian Pollinators Initiative [1]
- African Pollinator Initiative [1]
- THE SAO PAULO DECLARATION ON POLLINATORS [rgm.fmrp.usp.br/beescience/arquivospdf/workshop.pdf]
- The Pollination Home Page [1]
- The North America Pollinator Protection Campaign [1]
- Pollinator Conservation Handbook [1]