Abstract

Many studies in the past decade, mostly in temperate countries, have documented the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on species richness, composition, and abundance and the behaviour of pollinators. Changes in landscape structure are considered to be the primary causes of the limitation of pollination services in agricultural systems. Here, we review evidence of general patterns as well as gaps in knowledge that could be used to support the development of policies for pollinator conservation and the restoration of degraded landscapes. Our results indicate a recent increase in the number of studies on the relationships between pollination processes and landscape patterns, with some key trends already being established. Many authors indicate, for example, that the spatial organization of a landscape has a great influence on the survival and dispersal capacity of many pollinators, as spatial organization affects resource availability and determines the functional connectivity of the landscape. Additionally, the shape, size and spatial arrangement of the patches of each type of natural environment, as well as the occurrence of different types of land use, can create sites with different degrees of connectivity or even barriers to movement between patches, which can deeply modify pollinator flows through the landscape and consequently the success of cross-pollination. However, there are still some gaps, such as in the knowledge of which critical values of habitat loss can lead to drastic increases in pollinator extinction rates, information that is needed to evaluate at what point plant-pollinator interactions may collapse. We also need to concentrate research effort on improving a landscape’s capacity to facilitate pollinator flow (connectivity) between crops and nesting/foraging areas.

Highlights

  • The past decade has seen a worldwide concern over pollinator decline. This concern has sparked a remarkable increase in studies that identify threats to pollinators and quantify the impact of pollinator decline on pollination services in natural and agricultural systems

  • Most studies point to landscape changes resulting from intensive land use and leading to habitat loss and fragmentation as one of the primary threats to pollination services (Kremen et al 2002; Steffan-Dewenter & Westphal 2008; Winfree et al 2009)

  • There is evidence that several crops are directly affected by changes in landscape structure, resulting in productivity loss that endangers both biodiversity and the stability of food production in the world (Steffan-Dewenter et al 2005; Tscharntke et al 2005; Chacoff & Aizen 2006, Carvalheiro et al 2010; Isaacs & Kirk 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

The past decade has seen a worldwide concern over pollinator decline (see COP 5 CBD section II decision v/5).

Results
Conclusion
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