Abstract

Pollinators provide important ecosystem services for crop production and food security. With the development of agricultural economy and the increasing intensity of land-use, a large number of natural or semi-natural habitats have been converted to croplands. Landscape homogenization and intensive management lead to the decline of wild bee diversity and threaten the sustainable agricultural production. In this study, we investigated the effects of landscape complexity (proportion of semi-natural habitats), local management practices (local flowering plant diversity and soil total nitrogen), and their interactions on diversity of bee pollinators in apple orchard in Changping District, Beijing. A total of 8642 bee individuals were captured, including 5125 honey bees and 3517 wild bees from 5 families, 14 genera, and 49 species. The optimal landscape scale for the response of bee diversity to landscape complexity and local management intensity was 500 m. Within 500 m radius of the site, the abundance of overall bees and wild bees significantly increased with increasing proportion of semi-natural habitats. The landscape complexity interacting with local flowering plant diversity significantly affected the richness of overall bee and wild bee. When the proportion of semi-natural habitats surrounding the apple orchards was low (≤29.9%), we found a positive effect of flowering plant diversity on the richness of overall bee and wild bee, whereas a reversed trend was found when the proportion of semi-natural habitats surrounding the apple orchards was high (>29.9%). In addition, the abundance of honey bees significantly increased with the increase of local flowering plant diversity and soil total nitrogen. The soil total nitrogen interacting with local flowering plant diversity significantly affected the honey bee abundance. At low levels of soil total nitrogen (≤1.9 g·kg-1), there was a positive effect of flowering plant diversity on honey bee abundance; whereas this trend was reversed at high levels of soil total nitrogen (>1.9 g·kg-1). Increasing the proportion of semi-natural habitats in agricultural landscape was beneficial to the increase of wild bee abundance, and flowering plant diversity could promote bee diversity but depending on landscape scale (proportion of semi-natural habitats) and local scale (nitrogen application). Therefore, multi-scale factors should be considered to develop conservation strategies to maintain the diversity of wild bees in agricultural landscape. Maintaining a higher proportion of cultivated land as much as possible is still a long-term requirement for production, while maintaining intermediate landscape complexity, increasing the diversity of flowering plants on the ground, and reducing the application of nitrogen fertilizer would be effective ways to promote the diversity of pollinating bees in apple orchards.

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