Abstract

Abstract Resilient pollination services depend on sufficient abundance of pollinating insects over time. Currently, however, most knowledge about the status and trends of pollinators is based on changes in pollinator species richness and distribution only. Systematic, long‐term monitoring of pollinators is urgently needed to provide baseline information on their status, to identify the drivers of declines and to inform suitable response measures. Power analysis was used to determine the number of sites required to detect a 30% change in pollinator populations over 10 years. We then evaluated the full economic costs of implementing four national monitoring schemes in the UK: (a) professional pollinator monitoring, (b) professional pollination service monitoring, (c) volunteer collected pan traps and (d) volunteer focal floral observations. These costs were compared to (a) the costs of implementing separate, expert‐designed research and monitoring networks and (b) the economic benefits of pollination services threatened by pollinator loss. Estimated scheme costs ranged from £6,159/year for a 75‐site volunteer focal flower observation scheme to £2.7 M/year for an 800‐site professional pollination service monitoring network. The estimated research costs saved using the site network as research infrastructure range from £1.46–4.17 M/year. The economic value of UK crop yield lost following a 30% decline in pollinators was estimated at ~£188 M/year. Synthesis and applications. We evaluated the full costs of running pollinator monitoring schemes against the economic benefits to research and society they provide. The annual costs of monitoring are <0.02% of the economic value of pollination services that would be lost after a 30% decline in pollination services. Furthermore, by providing high‐quality scientific data, monitoring schemes would save at least £1.5 on data collection per £1 spent. Our findings demonstrate that long‐term systematic monitoring can be a cost‐effective tool for both answering key research questions and setting action points for policymakers. Careful consideration must be given to scheme design, the logistics of national‐scale implementation and resulting data quality when selecting the most appropriate combination of surveyors, methods and site networks to deliver a successful scheme.

Highlights

  • The abundance and diversity of pollinating insects, such as bees and flies, is critical to ecosystem functioning, crop productivity, farm income and access to nutritious food (Garibaldi et al, 2020; Genung et al, 2017; IPBES, 2016)

  • We evaluated the full costs of running pollinator monitoring schemes against the economic benefits to research and society they provide

  • The results demonstrate that a well-designed pollinator monitoring scheme could be a highly costeffective means of addressing key research questions, compared to the costs of implementing separate research projects

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The abundance and diversity of pollinating insects, such as bees and flies, is critical to ecosystem functioning, crop productivity, farm income and access to nutritious food (Garibaldi et al, 2020; Genung et al, 2017; IPBES, 2016). Understanding how land management affects pollinator abundance and diversity in combination with other drivers is necessary to design more targeted, adaptive management strategies at national scales (Garibaldi et al, 2020; Lyons et al, 2008) To this end, systematic monitoring of pollinators and pollination services has been identified in the United Kingdom (DEFRA, 2015) and internationally (IPBES, 2016), as vital to obtaining a more complete picture of pollinator status and trends, identifying the importance of different pressures, and to inform suitable response measures. A partnership of stakeholders developed four potential, monitoring schemes, designed to identify national-scale trends in the abundance of insect pollinators (at different levels of taxonomic resolution) and/or pollination services to crops These schemes are as follows: (a) professional pollinator monitoring, (b) professional pollination service monitoring, (c) volunteer collected pan traps and (d) volunteer focal floral observations.

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
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