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Portrait of Henrik Smith. Photo.

Henrik Smith

Professor

Portrait of Henrik Smith. Photo.

High dependency of chilli fruit set on wild pollinators in southern India

Author

  • Johanna Yourstone
  • Josefin Gunnarsson
  • Henrik G Smith
  • Hema Somanathan

Summary, in Swedish

Ongoing pollinator declines threaten the production of many entomophilous crops. Recent reports that yields of animal-pollinated crops in India are increasing less than pollinator-independent ones suggest the occurrence of pollen limitation. We experimentally evaluated if production of the common food crop chilli benefits from insect pollination and if crop production is constrained by lack of pollinators under field conditions. Experiments were conducted in eleven chilli fields distributed across a semi-arid agricultural landscape in Andhra Pradesh, India. The experimental treatments included open controls, open pollen-supplemented flowers, and bagged flowers for pollinator exclusion. The fruit set from the two open treatments (control and pollen supplementation) was about three times higher than that from the exclusion treatment, suggesting strong dependence on insect pollination. Control supplementation treatments did not differ, which suggests that there normally is sufficient pollination for chilli production in the area. Bees contributed 98% of flower visits. Flower visitor abundance correlated with higher fruit set, but only significantly so in the pollen supplemented treatment. While previous studies that are mostly conducted in greenhouse settings suggest that chilli reproduction does not depend much on animal pollination, our field study confirms that presence of animal pollinators increases fruit set. Future research should establish if this also applies to fruit quality and total yield. Our study highlights the importance of field-realistic experiments and warrants research on pollinator dependencies of other crops. The results have implications for crop production in an area where pollinator levels may be sufficiently high for crop pollination today but possibly not in the future due to environmental change.</p><div id="ConnectiveDocSignExtentionInstalled" data-extension-version="1.0.4"> </div>

Department/s

  • Biodiversity
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
  • Biodiversity and Conservation Science
  • Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
  • Lund university sustainability forum

Publishing year

2021-07-09

Language

Swedish

Pages

65-74

Publication/Series

Journal of Pollination Ecology

Volume

28

Issue

6

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Enviroquest Ltd

Topic

  • Ecology

Status

Published

Project

  • The role of native bees in rendering pollination services and farm income augmentation in the Western Ghats landscape, India

Research group

  • Biodiversity and Conservation Science

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1920-7603