Abstract

Global declines in pollinator populations and associated services make it imperative to identify and sensitively manage valuable habitats. Coastal habitats such as saltmarshes can support extensive flowering meadows, but their importance for pollinators, and how this varies with land-use intensity, is poorly understood. We hypothesised that saltmarshes provide important bee foraging habitat, and that livestock grazing either suppresses or enhances its value by reducing the abundance - or increasing the diversity - of flowering plants. To test these hypotheses, we surveyed 11 saltmarshes in Wales (UK) under varying grazing management (long-term ungrazed, extensively grazed, intensively grazed) over three summers and investigated causal pathways linking grazing intensity with bee abundance and diversity using a series of linear mixed models. We also compared observed bee abundances to 11 common terrestrial habitats using national survey data.Grazing reduced bee abundance and richness via reductions in the flower cover of the two key food plants: sea aster Tripolium pannonicum and sea lavender Limonium spp. Grazing also increased flowering plant richness, but the positive effects of flower richness did not compensate for the negative effects of reduced flower cover on bees. Bee abundances were approximately halved in extensively grazed marshes (relative to ungrazed) and halved again in intensively grazed marshes. Saltmarsh flowers were primarily visited by honeybees Apis mellifera and bumblebees Bombus spp. in mid and late summer. Compared to other broad habitat types in Wales, ungrazed saltmarshes ranked highly for honeybees and bumblebees in July-August, but were relatively unimportant for solitary bees. Intensively grazed saltmarshes were amongst the least valuable habitats for all bee types.Under appropriate grazing management, saltmarshes provide a valuable and previously overlooked foraging habitat for bees. The strong effects of livestock grazing identified here are likely to extend geographically given that both livestock grazing and key grazing-sensitive plants are widespread in European saltmarshes. We recommend that long-term ungrazed saltmarshes are protected from grazing, and that grazing is maintained at extensive levels on grazed marshes. In this way, saltmarshes can provide forage for wild and managed bee populations and support ecosystem services.

Highlights

  • Flower-visiting insects, bees, provide a vital ecosystem service by pollinating crop plants and wild flowers (Gallai et al, 2009; Garibaldi et al, 2011; Hanley et al, 2015)

  • Grazing intensity had a significant effect on bee abundance and bee richness, but not on Shannon (H’) diversity (Fig. 3a–c, Appendix C)

  • This study shows for the first time that saltmarshes provide important foraging grounds for high numbers of honeybees and bumblebees, and that just two flowering plants account for practically all of this habitat provisioning service: Aster Tripolium pannonicum and Limonium spp

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Summary

Introduction

Flower-visiting insects, bees, provide a vital ecosystem service by pollinating crop plants and wild flowers (Gallai et al, 2009; Garibaldi et al, 2011; Hanley et al, 2015). Saltmarshes deliver important ecosystem services (Barbier et al, 2011; McKinley et al, 2018), yet are rarely considered for their potential value as a pollinator habitat (Rickert et al, 2018, 2012; van Klink et al, 2016). European saltmarshes do not cover a large area - approximately 440,000 ha in mainland Europe and the British Isles (McOwen et al, 2017) – they sit within a wider network of semi-natural coastal habitats, and could act as a vital corridor, increasing ecosystem connectivity and facilitating biological flow between crops and bee nesting and foraging areas (Viana et al, 2012). It is worthwhile to understand how valuable marshes are for pollinators, and how grazing management affects their value

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