2016
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12813
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Re‐evaluating strategies for pollinator‐dependent crops: How useful is parthenocarpy?

Abstract: Summary Whilst most studies reviewing the reliance of global agriculture on insect pollination advocate increasing the ‘supply’ of pollinators (wild or managed) to improve crop yields, there has been little focus on altering a crop's ‘demand’ for pollinators.Parthenocarpy (fruit set in the absence of fertilization) is a trait which can increase fruit quantity and quality from pollinator‐dependent crops by removing the need for pollination.Here we present a meta‐analysis of studies examining the extent and effe… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…This value is based upon estimates of the "pollinator dependence" of each crop; the proportion of harvestable yield that depends on animal mediated pollination, or how much yield is lost in absence of such pollination.Recent studies have begun to show that the pollinator dependence of a crop is not fixed and that it interacts with other biological factors (soil quality and predation by pests 4-6 ) or agronomic inputs (fertilizer, agrochemicals and water 7-11 ), see review 12 .Pollinator dependence can also vary with crop cultivar, for example in apples 13 and oilseed rape 14 . Understanding pollinator dependence on a per-cultivar basis could enable crop producers to secure production as pollination services become less predictable 15,16 following shifts in pollinator populations through time 17,18 . In the short term, producers in landscapes with low levels of semi-natural habitat and pollination service capacity 19 may benefit from use of low-dependent cultivars, though this needs to be considered alongside other agronomic attributes (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This value is based upon estimates of the "pollinator dependence" of each crop; the proportion of harvestable yield that depends on animal mediated pollination, or how much yield is lost in absence of such pollination.Recent studies have begun to show that the pollinator dependence of a crop is not fixed and that it interacts with other biological factors (soil quality and predation by pests 4-6 ) or agronomic inputs (fertilizer, agrochemicals and water 7-11 ), see review 12 .Pollinator dependence can also vary with crop cultivar, for example in apples 13 and oilseed rape 14 . Understanding pollinator dependence on a per-cultivar basis could enable crop producers to secure production as pollination services become less predictable 15,16 following shifts in pollinator populations through time 17,18 . In the short term, producers in landscapes with low levels of semi-natural habitat and pollination service capacity 19 may benefit from use of low-dependent cultivars, though this needs to be considered alongside other agronomic attributes (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pollinator dependence can also vary with crop cultivar, for example in apples 13 and oilseed rape 14 . Understanding pollinator dependence on a per-cultivar basis could enable crop producers to secure production as pollination services become less predictable 15,16 following shifts in pollinator populations through time 17,18 . In the short term, producers in landscapes with low levels of semi-natural habitat and pollination service capacity 19 may benefit from use of low-dependent cultivars, though this needs to be considered alongside other agronomic attributes (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Cornwall already benefits from biodiverse hedgerows and generally smaller field sizes, availability of floral resources may be strongly influencing the high pollination rates observed in this study and is a clear incentive for growers in this region to maintain and protect these habitats to ensure high and stable pollination services in the future. Growers may also benefit from using crop varieties which have been selectively bred to be fully parthenocarpic (currently not done by commercial growers of courgette), especially in combination with pollinator-supportive practices (Knapp et al 2016). …”
Section: Potential Management Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Realistic estimates of the amount of insect pollination required for optimum fruit set need to account for not only the variability in pollination deficit that might result from variable pollinator densities and environmental conditions, but also the variability in pollinator dependence between varieties of single crop species, for which there is currently little good evidence (Melathopoulos et al 2015, Knapp et al 2016, although see Garratt et al 2014). In the wider context, discussion and strategies for improving horticultural crop production need to incorporate costs and benefits associated with different methods of maximizing pollination, while remembering that factors other than pollination also contribute to fruit set.…”
Section: Potential Management Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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