Abstract

Summary Grassland for livestock production is a major form of land use throughout Europe and its intensive management threatens biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in agricultural landscapes. Modest increases to conventional grassland biodiversity could have considerable positive impacts on the provision of ecosystem services, such as pollination, to surrounding habitats.Using a field‐scale experiment in which grassland seed mixes and sward management were manipulated, complemented by surveys on working farms and phytometer experiments, the impact of conventional grassland diversity and management on the functional diversity and ecosystem service provision of pollinator communities were investigated.Increasing plant richness, by the addition of both legumes and forbs, was associated with significant enhancements in the functional diversity of grassland pollinator communities. This was associated with increased temporal stability of flower–visitor interactions at the community level. Visitation networks revealed pasture species Taraxacum sp. (Wigg.) (dandelion) and Cirsium arvense (Scop.) (creeping thistle) to have the highest pollinator visitation frequency and richness. Cichorium intybus (L.) (chichory) was highlighted as an important species having both high pollinator visitation and desirable agronomic properties.Increased sward richness was associated with an increase in the pollination of two phytometer species; Fragaria × ananassa (strawberry) and Silene dioica (red campion), but not Vicia faba (broad bean). Enhanced functional diversity, richness and abundance of the pollinator communities associated with more diverse neighbouring pastures were found to be potential mechanisms for improved pollination. Synthesis and applications. A modest increase in conventional grassland plant diversity with legumes and forbs, achievable with the expertise and resources available to most grassland farmers, could enhance pollinator functional diversity, richness and abundance. Moreover, our results suggest that this could improve pollination services and consequently surrounding crop yields (e.g. strawberry) and wildflower reproduction in agro‐ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Understanding how species’ interactions affect ecological function is central to conservation biology

  • Pollinator functional diversity significantly increased as sward diversity increased in the field experiment (v2 = 125Á57, d.f. = 1, P = 0Á0052) (Fig. 1a)

  • We found modest increases in conventional grassland plant species richness to be associated with significantly enhanced pollination services, potentially enhancing crop yields and wildflower reproduction in adjacent habitats

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how species’ interactions affect ecological function is central to conservation biology. 2005) which has been found to improve ecosystem service provision (Albrecht et al 2012) This positive relationship between functional diversity and ecosystem service provision is associated with complementary niche partitioning between functional groups which can enhance the temporal and spatial stability of ecosystem processes (Naeem & Li 1997; Ebeling et al 2008; Macfadyen et al 2011; Brittain, Kremen & Klein 2013). A number of hypotheses explain such cascading ecosystem-level processes (Hooper et al 2005), much of the work has been theoretical and the putative causal factors rarely manipulated in the field at the community scale

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