Environmental variables and species traits as drivers of wild bee pollination in intensive agroecosystems—A metabarcoding approach

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Querejeta, Marina | Marchal, Lorène | Pfeiffer, Paul | Roncoroni, Marilyn | Bretagnolle, Vincent | Gaba, Sabrina | Boyer, Stéphane

Edité par CCSD ; John Wiley & Sons Inc. -

International audience. Wild bees are known to be efficient pollinators of wild plants and cultivated crops and they are essential ecosystem service providers. However, wild bee populations have been suffering from significant declines in the last decades mainly due to the use of agrochemicals. Within this framework, we aimed to characterize wild bees' pollination spectrum (i.e., the community of pollinated flowering plants) in intensive agroecosystems, and describe the environmental variables and wild bee species traits influencing the pollination. To do this, we conducted metabarcoding analyses of pollen loads from wild bees collected in sunflower crops in the French region of Nouvelle-Aquitaine. Our study revealed that wild bees visited flowering plants corresponding to 231 different operational taxonomic units, classified into 38 families of which Asteraceae, Brassicaceae, and Apiaceae were the most visited and more than 90% of the visited taxa turned out to be wildflowers. We also analyzed the potential effect of environmental variables and wild bee species traits in governing their choice of pollinated plants. The community composition of pollinated plants varied depending on the flowering stages of the sunflower and the farming system. Our results also show that pollination niche breadth (alpha diversity) varied depending on the flowering stages of the sunflower but was not different between organic and conventional farming systems. Regarding wild bee species traits, the community composition of pollinated plants varied in relation to wild bees' body sizes and sociality levels. Our results are consistent with previous studies, suggesting that solitary bees are more specialist when it comes to flower selection than social bees, which are more generalist. The metabarcoding of pollen loads enabled us to draw a global picture of plant–wild bee interactions in an intensive agroecosystem. Our findings support the hypothesis that a higher diversity of weeds may increase wild bee diversity in intensive agroecosystems

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