Abstract

Urban habitat characteristics create environmental filtering of pollinator communities. They also impact pollinating insect phenology through the presence of an urban heat island and the year‐round availability of floral resources provided by ornamental plants.Here, we monitored the phenology and composition of pollinating insect communities visiting replicates of an experimental plant assemblage comprising two species, with contrasting floral traits: Sinapis alba and Lotus corniculatus, whose flowering periods were artificially extended. Plant assemblage replicates were set up over two consecutive years in two different habitats: rural and densely urbanized, within the same biogeographical region (Ile‐de‐France region, France).The phenology of pollination activity, recorded from the beginning (early March) to the end (early November) of the season, differed between these two habitats. Several pollinator morphogroups (small wild bees, bumblebees, honeybees) were significantly more active on our plant sets in the urban habitat compared to the rural one, especially in early spring and autumn. This resulted in different overall reproductive success of the plant assemblage between the two habitats. Over the course of the season, reproductive success of S. alba was always significantly higher in the urban habitat, while reproductive success of L. corniculatus was significantly higher in the urban habitat only during early flowering.These findings suggest different phenological adaptations to the urban habitat for different groups of pollinators. Overall, results indicate that the broadened activity period of pollinating insects recorded in the urban environment could enhance the pollination function and the reproductive success of plant communities in cities.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is one of the main and fastest-acting drivers of landuse changes (Grimm et al, 2008; Patacchini & Zenou, 2009), leading to strong consequences on species richness (McKinney, 2008)

  • Experiments were conducted over two consecutive years in four (2018) and six (2017) locations in grasslands located in dense urban habitat and forest-dominated seminatural habitat—hereafter referred to as “rural.” All sites were located in the same biogeographical region: the Ile-de France region that encompasses a large diversity of habitats, from the city of Paris to seminatural and rural habitats (INSEE, 2015)

  • Our results show that the phenology of pollination activity differed between the two habitats, with several pollinator morphogroups being significantly more active on the plant assemblage in the urban habitat compared to the rural one, especially during the advanced and the delayed flowering of this plant assemblage

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Urbanization is one of the main and fastest-acting drivers of landuse changes (Grimm et al, 2008; Patacchini & Zenou, 2009), leading to strong consequences on species richness (McKinney, 2008). Some recent studies report a broadening of the flight period of pollinators in the city, whereas pollinator activity tends to peak earlier in spring in seminatural habitats (Harrison, Gibbs, & Winfree, 2018; Leong, Ponisio, Kremen, Thorp, & Roderick, 2016; Luder, Knop, & Menz, 2018; Wray & Elle, 2015) This extended period of activity may be supported by the above-mentioned year-round availability of floral resources in cities. We expect a broadening of the pollinator flight season in the urban habitat, leading to more efficient early and/or late pollination, and higher overall plant reproductive success in urban habitats compared to rural ones To our knowledge, this is one of the few studies (Rafferty, Caradonna, Burkle, Iler, & Bronstein, 2013) that have associated an all-season monitoring of pollinator activity to the evaluation of the pollination function, through the assessment of plant reproductive success in an urban–rural paired design

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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