Abstract

The cotton agroecosystem is one of the most intensely managed, economically and culturally important cropping systems worldwide. Native pollinators are essential in providing pollination services to a diverse array of crops, including those which have the ability to self-pollinate. Cotton, which is autogamous, can potentially benefit from insect-mediated pollination services provided by native bees within the agroecosystem. Examined through two replicated experiments over two years, we hypothesized that native bees facilitated cross-pollination, which resulted in increased lint of harvested bolls produced by flowers exposed to bees and overall lint weight yield of the plant. Cotton bolls from flowers that were caged and exposed to bees, flowers that were hand-crossed, and bolls from flowers on uncaged plants exposed to pollinators had higher pre-gin weights and post-gin weights than bolls from flowers of caged plants excluded from pollinators. When cotton plants were caged with the local native bee Melissodes tepaneca, seed cotton weight was 0.8 g higher on average in 2018 and 1.18 g higher on average in 2019 than when cotton plants were excluded from bees. Cotton production gains from flowers exposed to M. tepaneca were similar when measuring lint and seed separately. Cotton flowers exposed over two weeks around the middle of the blooming period resulted in an overall yield gain of 12% to 15% on a whole plant basis and up to 24% from bolls produced from flowers exposed directly to M. tepaneca. This information complements cotton-mediated conservation benefits provided to native pollinators by substantiating native bee-mediated pollination services provided to the cotton agroecosystem.

Highlights

  • Pollination services provided by managed and native bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) are vital in the production of many crops

  • Direct pollination observations were not done for M. tepaneca within the experimental plots, native bees and other potential pollinators were observed in the cotton field where the experiment was conducted and in cotton fields within the region [4,10,15,17]

  • Our findings indicated that cotton benefited from pollination services provided by the native bee Melissodes tepaneca

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Summary

Introduction

Pollination services provided by managed and native bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) are vital in the production of many crops. Bees, pollinate 66% of the world’s 1500 crop species and are directly or indirectly essential for an estimated 15–30% of crop production [1]. Cotton is an autogamous species, meaning it has the ability to self-pollinate, it can still benefit from insect-mediated pollination. Other autogamous crops such as coffee, canola, and soybean see considerable gains when visited by bees [2]. Cotton has large flowers that produce large amounts of pollen and nectar that can serve as a food resource and attractant for many pollinating insects, including native bees. Cotton pollen is rather large and too heavy to move between flowers without the assistance of an insect courier [4,5,6]

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