DECLINE IN EUROPEAN POLLINATORS TO BE MAPPED


Environmental Panorama
International
August of 2009


31 August 2009 - Wild plants as well as cultivated crops are impacted by lack of pollination. - The number of bees, hoverflies and butterflies is on the decline in Denmark and the rest of Europe. The decline is not just a threat for the species themselves, but also for the plants they pollinate. Wild plants as well as cultivated crops are affected by the lack of pollination. Loss of honey bee colonies costs professional beekeepers in EU countries in direct loss of output and the indirect loss of output due to lack of pollination of crops is estimated to be even higher. Denmark’s National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University is participating in a five-year, pan-European research project that will shed light on the threats and opportunities for the most important pollinator species.

The EU-financed research project, STEP (Status and Trends of European Pollinators) will aim to fill a wide range of holes in the knowledge shared in Europe on the fate of honey bees, bumblebees, hoverflies and butterflies.

Common to these insect species is that they play a crucial role in pollination of cultivated and wild plants and are often specialised to a few plant species. Honey bees are the absolute most dominant species in terms of pollination of arable and horticultural crops and accounts for approx. 85 per cent of all pollination in this sector. But the number of ’domesticated’ honey bee colonies have in recent decades been in continuous decline due to disease and chemicals in the environment and other environmentally related stressors.

Bumblebees in the danger zone
Senior researcher, Beate Strandberg, NERI singles out bumblebees among wild bees as being especially at risk in Denmark:

‘We see various tendencies, but bumblebees are the most vulnerable. If you look through the Red List, then almost half of bumblebee species are threatened. But there is great pressure on pollinators in general. This means that crops are inadequately pollinated. This is also true for wildflower species.’

Denmark’s National Environmental Institute (NERI), Aarhus University is involved in two main work areas under STEP. According to Beate Strandberg one of the main tasks is to map the extent of the pressure from various sources on pollinators on the large, regional and local scale.

‘A species can be thought to be reasonably well represented on a large scale, but be totally absent in certain smaller geographic areas. We will especially continue our work with pesticides, both direct effects on pollinators and indirect effects through impacts on plants, and thereby pollinators, and seek a better understanding of the interactions. Also in relation to pesticide management, when the wind blows pesticides out into the wild flora during spraying.

But factors other than pesticides play a role in the decline in pollinators, and it will probably be hugely complicated to unravel all the reasons and their scale’, explains Beate Strandberg.

She points out that a range factors will presumably point in the same direction and comprise a cocktail of negative factors for pollinators:

‘It can be fragmentation of the landscape, with longer distances between habitats, that makes it more difficult for pollinators to find nesting sites and food, and it can be pesticides, bee diseases, invasive self-pollinating plants, climate change, direct control of the insects by humans and deterioration in the natural environment in general.’

Beate Strandberg believes that safety levels for pesticide approval can become a topic for discussion in connection with the research and mapping of the situation for pollinators.

‘When approving new pesticides the so-called bee test is used, where the danger associated with the individual agent is tested on honey bees – but not on bumblebees. And this can be a problem, as bumblebees are more vulnerable than honey bees. At least, some of studies point to bumblebees being more vulnerable to pesticides – should the safety level then be made stricter?'

Rescue plan for pollinators
The other main task for NERI in STEP is continually to keep the project, in which 20 research institutions from 16 European countries are taking part, on track, with the University of Reading, England as project coordinator.

‘Really it is a question of a type of project management’, explains Senior researcher, Peter Borgen Sørensen. ‘We will be managing the project on an ongoing basis, so that the most important science gaps are addressed over the five years it runs for. This will presumably also involve evaluation of the entire project annually, using the new knowledge revealed to identify whether we are on the right track. We need to ensure that the research can support a rescue plan for pollinators in the best possible way. This type of project management can be hard for some universities, but it is something we are good at NERI.’

As well as important new knowledge on European pollinators the end result for STEP will be a range of recommendations and guidelines for authorities and legislators. But also a clarification of where gaps in scientific knowledge remain.

Another actual result will be preparation of a European Red List for bees and a draft Red List for hover flies. Together with the existing date of European butterflies the aim it to prepare a joint Red List for European pollinators.
Contact: Senior researcher, Beate Strandberg

 
 

Source: Danish Ministry of the Environment
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