Abstract

The pollination ecology in agroecosystems tackles a landscape in which plants and pollinators need to adjust, or be adjusted, to human intervention. A valid, widely applied approach is to regard pollination as a link between specific plants and their pollinators. However, recent evidence has added landscape features for a wider ecological perspective. Are we going in the right direction? Are existing methods providing pollinator monitoring tools suitable for understanding agroecosystems? In Italy, we needed to address these questions to respond to government pressure to implement pollinator monitoring in agroecosystems. We therefore surveyed the literature, grouped methods and findings, and evaluated approaches. We selected studies that may contain directions and tools directly linked to pollinators and agroecosystems. Our analysis revealed four main paths that must come together at some point: (i) the research question perspective, (ii) the advances of landscape analysis, (iii) the role of vegetation, and (iv) the gaps in our knowledge of pollinators taxonomy and behavior. An important conclusion is that the pollinator scale is alarmingly disregarded. Debate continues about what features to include in pollinator monitoring and the appropriate level of detail: we suggest that the pollinator scale should be the main driver.

Highlights

  • The goal of this outline is to summarize the methods currently used in solving research questions related to pollinators and pollination services, with a special focus on agricultural landscapes and the Mediterranean region

  • Are we going in the right direction? Are existing methods providing pollinator monitoring tools suitable for understanding agroecosystems? In Italy, we needed to address these questions to respond to government pressure to implement pollinator monitoring in agroecosystems

  • Debate continues about what features to include in pollinator monitoring and the appropriate level of detail: we suggest that the pollinator scale should be the main driver

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of this outline is to summarize the methods currently used in solving research questions related to pollinators and pollination services, with a special focus on agricultural landscapes and the Mediterranean region. The Mediterranean region is a heterogeneous macro-region, and the seaboard countries are in a very special situation. These countries share the influence of a climate mitigated by the sea, which favors biological diversification (e.g., many endemic plant species [1]). They rely mainly on agriculture consisting of farms that have remained relatively small [2]. Evidence suggests that local policies and agricultural practices may be the drivers of stable crop production at a local scale [11]

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