Abstract

Riparian forests with oaks, ashes and elms, now highly fragmented and rare in Europe, are considered hotspots for ecosystem services. However, their capacity to provide pollination seems to be quite low, although reports from in-situ research supporting this view are scarce. Our goal was therefore to thoroughly assess their pollination potential based on multifaceted field measurements. For this, we selected six test sites with well-developed riparian hardwood forests, located in the agricultural landscape along the middle Vistula River in Poland. We used seven indicators relating to habitat suitability (nesting sites and floral resources) and pollinator abundance (bumblebees and other Apoidea) and propose a threshold value (AdjMax) based on value distribution and Hampel’s test to indicate the level of pollination potential for this type of riparian forest. The obtained AdjMax for bumblebee density was 500 ind. ha−1, for Apoidea abundance—0.42 ind. day−1, while for nectar resources—200 kg ha−1. We demonstrate that the investigated small patches of the riparian hardwood forest have a higher pollination potential than reported earlier for riparian and other broadleaved temperate forests, but the indicators were inconsistent. As forest islands in the agricultural landscape, riparian hardwood forests play an important role in maintaining the diversity and abundance of wild pollinators, especially in early spring when there is still no food base available elsewhere.

Highlights

  • The concept of ecosystem services (ES) describes the relations linking ecological systems with social systems by adopting the anthropocentric approach

  • The potential of riparian hardwood forest ecosystems to provide pollination service was estimated using seven indicators assigned to two basic dimensions: habitat potential and pollinators’ potential (Table 2)

  • In our study we developed and tested in the field a set of indicators to measure the pollination potential of riparian hardwood forests: five indicators of habitat potential, and two indicators of pollinators’ potential

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of ecosystem services (ES) describes the relations linking ecological systems with social systems by adopting the anthropocentric approach. It focuses on the benefits provided by nature to humans. The concept originated in economic sciences; it is transdisciplinary, taking over the terminology and research methods from both the natural, as well as social and economic sciences. The ecological perspective focuses on the condition of ecosystems understood as specific dynamic structural and functional spatial systems composed of a biocoenosis and a biotope. Social perspective deals with the benefits derived from ES and their impact on human well-being [1].

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