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Forage for bumble bees and honey bees in farmland: a case study

 

作者: FussellM,   CorbetSarah A,  

 

期刊: Journal of Apicultural Research  (Taylor Available online 1991)
卷期: Volume 30, issue 2  

页码: 87-97

 

ISSN:0021-8839

 

年代: 1991

 

DOI:10.1080/00218839.1991.11101239

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

关键词: bumble bees;honey bees;Bombus;Apis mellifera;field margins;flowers;foraging;pollination;field crops;vegetation;plant succession

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

SUMMARYBee visits and the abundance of flowers of different plant species were recorded on a standard walk through UK farmland on 30 occasions in 1989 (the seasonal survey), and in dawn-to-dusk studies. Most of the species visited by bees were perennials. In the seasonal survey (a total of 1 221 bee visits), most visits were made by the long-tongued bumble bee,Bombus pascuorum(447) and by honey bees,Apis mellifera(321). Another long-tongued bumble bee,B. hortorum, was also abundant. The main forage plants important for both long-tongued bumble bee species comprised a seasonal succession of labiates:Lamium album, Stachys sylvaticaandBallota nigra.Plants visited by shorter-tongued bumble bees (B. terrestris/B. lucorum, B. pratorumandB. lapidarius), and honey bees, includedRubus fruticosusagg.,Cirsium vulgare, Epilobium hirsutum, Heracleum sphondyliumandBrassica napus, and probably other plants outside the survey area. Dawn-to-dusk studies showed that long-tongued bumble bee species were largely responsible for pollinating visits to field bean,Vicia faba, and thatB. pascuorumbegan foraging earlier and finished later In the day thanA. mellifera.Bee visits were unevenly distributed among the 18 sections of the farm walk in the seasonal survey. The sections that received most bumble bee (and honey bee) visits supported a seasonal succession of forage plants with abundantBallota nigraandR. fruticosusagg.,E. hirsutumandBrassica napus, andL. album, which was Important in early summer. Sections on gravel rather than clay soils and with a hedge and ditch received numerous bumble bee visits. The best sections were areas undisturbed by cultivation or grazing, in which perennials other thanUrtica dioicacould establish. Bumble bee forage could be improved by managing and extending field margins and other uncultivated areas on the farm.

 

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