Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture

Ecosystem services (ES) such as pollination are vital for the continuous supply of food to a growing human population, but the decline in populations of insect pollinators worldwide poses a threat to food and nutritional security. Using a pollinator (honeybee) exclusion approach, we evaluated the im...

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Main Authors: Harpinder Sandhu, Benjamin Waterhouse, Stephane Boyer, Steve Wratten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2016-07-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
ES
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/2099.pdf
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spelling doaj-8f8b678710ad4b5f8edb1277ba6fd92a2020-11-25T01:01:04ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592016-07-014e209910.7717/peerj.2099Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agricultureHarpinder Sandhu0Benjamin Waterhouse1Stephane Boyer2Steve Wratten3School of the Environment, Flinders University, Adelaide, AustraliaBio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New ZealandBio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New ZealandBio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New ZealandEcosystem services (ES) such as pollination are vital for the continuous supply of food to a growing human population, but the decline in populations of insect pollinators worldwide poses a threat to food and nutritional security. Using a pollinator (honeybee) exclusion approach, we evaluated the impact of pollinator scarcity on production in four brassica fields, two producing hybrid seeds and two producing open-pollinated ones. There was a clear reduction in seed yield as pollination rates declined. Open-pollinated crops produced significantly higher yields than did the hybrid ones at all pollination rates. The hybrid crops required at least 0.50 of background pollination rates to achieve maximum yield, whereas in open-pollinated crops, 0.25 pollination rates were necessary for maximum yield. The total estimated economic value of pollination services provided by honeybees to the agricultural industry in New Zealand is NZD $1.96 billion annually. This study indicates that loss of pollination services can result in significant declines in production and have serious implications for the market economy in New Zealand. Depending on the extent of honeybee population decline, and assuming that results in declining pollination services, the estimated economic loss to New Zealand agriculture could be in the range of NZD $295–728 million annually.https://peerj.com/articles/2099.pdfBrassicaEconomic valueESPollination scarcitySeed productionPollination rate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harpinder Sandhu
Benjamin Waterhouse
Stephane Boyer
Steve Wratten
spellingShingle Harpinder Sandhu
Benjamin Waterhouse
Stephane Boyer
Steve Wratten
Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
PeerJ
Brassica
Economic value
ES
Pollination scarcity
Seed production
Pollination rate
author_facet Harpinder Sandhu
Benjamin Waterhouse
Stephane Boyer
Steve Wratten
author_sort Harpinder Sandhu
title Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
title_short Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
title_full Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
title_fullStr Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
title_sort scarcity of ecosystem services: an experimental manipulation of declining pollination rates and its economic consequences for agriculture
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2016-07-01
description Ecosystem services (ES) such as pollination are vital for the continuous supply of food to a growing human population, but the decline in populations of insect pollinators worldwide poses a threat to food and nutritional security. Using a pollinator (honeybee) exclusion approach, we evaluated the impact of pollinator scarcity on production in four brassica fields, two producing hybrid seeds and two producing open-pollinated ones. There was a clear reduction in seed yield as pollination rates declined. Open-pollinated crops produced significantly higher yields than did the hybrid ones at all pollination rates. The hybrid crops required at least 0.50 of background pollination rates to achieve maximum yield, whereas in open-pollinated crops, 0.25 pollination rates were necessary for maximum yield. The total estimated economic value of pollination services provided by honeybees to the agricultural industry in New Zealand is NZD $1.96 billion annually. This study indicates that loss of pollination services can result in significant declines in production and have serious implications for the market economy in New Zealand. Depending on the extent of honeybee population decline, and assuming that results in declining pollination services, the estimated economic loss to New Zealand agriculture could be in the range of NZD $295–728 million annually.
topic Brassica
Economic value
ES
Pollination scarcity
Seed production
Pollination rate
url https://peerj.com/articles/2099.pdf
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AT stephaneboyer scarcityofecosystemservicesanexperimentalmanipulationofdecliningpollinationratesanditseconomicconsequencesforagriculture
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