Ecological and Social Drivers of Coffee Pollination in Santander, Colombia

Manifestación

Autores
Identificador
1073371
Fecha de publicación
2015
Forma obra
Texto
Lugar de producción
Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 211 (2015) 145–154. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2015.06.007, 2015
Nota de edición
Digitalización realizada por la Biblioteca Virtual del Banco de la República (Colombia)
Materias
  • Ciencias naturales y matemáticas; Ciencias naturales y matemáticas / Animales; Ciencias naturales y matemáticas / Animales / Temas específicos en historia natural
  • Agroforestry systems; Landscape context; Farm management; Organic and conventional coffee farming; Ecosystem services; Drivers of crop adoption; Pollinators
Notas
  • Colfuturo
  • © Derechos reservados del autor
  • Santander (Colombia)
  • Bees and other insects provide pollination services that are key to determining the fruit set on coffee plantations. These pollination services are influenced by local ecology as well as human factors, both social and economic. To better understand these different factors, we assessed their effect on pollinators and coffee pollination services in Santander, Colombia. We quantified the effect of key ecological drivers on pollinator community composition, such as the method of farm management (either conventional or organic) and the surrounding landscape composition, specifically the proximity to forest. We found that ambient levels of pollination services provided by the local pollinator fauna (open pollination) accounted for a 10.5 ± 2.0% increase in final coffee fruit set, and that the various pollinators are affected differently by the differing factors. For example, our findings indicate that conventional farm management, using synthetic inputs, can promote pollinators, especially if they are in close proximity to natural forest fragments. This is particularly true for stingless bees. Honeybee visitation to coffee is also positively influenced by the conventional management of farms. Factors associated with greater numbers of stingless bees on farms include greater shade cover, lower tree densities, smaller numbers and types of trees in bloom, and younger coffee plantations. A forested landscape close to farms appears to enhance these factors, giving increased stability and resilience to the pollinating bees and insects. However we found that organic farms also support diverse pollinator communities, even if distant from forest fragments.
Enlace permanente
https://www.cervantesvirtual.com/obra/ecological-and-social-drivers-of-coffee-pollination-in-santander-colombia-1073371
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