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Pollination, Pollinators & Agri culture: Canadian international leadership, then and now Peter Kevan Canadian Pollination Initiative University of Guelph, Ontario

Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian international leadership, then and now

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Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian international leadership, then and now. Peter Kevan Canadian Pollination Initiative University of Guelph, Ontario. Pollination & Pollinator Shortages. Since the dawn of agriculture Figs Dates. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages

• Since the dawn of agriculture– Figs – Dates

Amos of the Old Testament was a fig-piercer (2800 BP)

Herodotus 2500 BP

Babylonian date pollination by hand 3700 BP

Page 3: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages Canadian Stories

• Canadian Examples: Canadian Leadership– An Apple a Day – Alfalfa Seeds, Forage, and Leafcutting Bees– Blueberries, Bees, Business & Litigation– Tomatoes & Bumblebees in the Greenhouse– Pollinator Biocontrol Biovectoring– Honeybees, Beekeeping … Honey, we got problems!– Emerging problems & NSERC-CANPOLIN

Page 4: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Apple

• Apple in the Canadian East

• Native bees (many species) & effective (J. Macoun 1923, 1924)

• Insecticides problematic, studies by W.H. Brittain and team (1928-1932) in Annapolis Valley, NS

• Solution

John Macoun

W. H. Brittain

Page 5: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

• Honeybee husbandry• Hive-mounted pollen dispensers

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Apple

C. Jay, hive deployment studies in orchards

Nova Scotia Ag. College dispenser

Page 6: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

R & D Needs for Pollination in Fruit Production

• R & D needs– Pollination needs (crosses between cultivars)– Pollinator behaviour– Orchard design– Pollinator diversification– Wild pollinators

Page 7: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination needs: Breeding System

• Apples are self-incompatible between cultivars

• Within cultivars, cross pollination does NOT result in fruit set

McIntosh pollen

G. DeliciousIdared, Spy, etc.

McIntosh flower

Page 8: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollinator Behaviour: Pollen Pick-up & Delivery

Stigma touch/ Pollen collected ++++ Stigma touch/

Nectar collected +++

Stigma missed/ Nectar collected +/-

Stigma missed/ Anthers missed - -

Page 9: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Floral Form & Bee Behaviour

Mutsu – large gaps between filaments: bees can work from petals

Jona Gold – filaments tight together: bees have to work from top

Empire – filaments with small gaps

Page 10: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination neighbourhoodMost pollen comes from within 20m of each tree

20m

Orchard Design: Gene Movement

Mixed pollens on one flower: better fruit-set

Some cultivars have “stud-pollen”; others have “wimp-pollen”

Page 11: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages Canadian Stories – Alfalfa

• Alfalfa in the Canadian West

• F.W.L. Sladen (1918) advocated Megachile spp. for pollination• To the 1940s, system seemed effective (Salt 1940)• High productivity of alfalfa seed leads to expansion of fields• By 1950s, problems!

Page 12: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories - Alfalfa

• Small fields merged into Huge fields, no Megachile nesting habitat, except around

edges

• Seed Yields drop: 1000 to 15 kg/ha (Stephen 1955)

• Solution

Page 13: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories - Alfalfa

• Alfalfa leafcutting bee husbandry

• G. Hobbs, Lethbridge, AB (perfected by mid 1960s) Gordon Hobbs

Page 14: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Value of Leafcutter Bee Industry in Canada (ca. 2009)

• 50,000 bees per ha = over 2.0 Billion bee population in SK alone (75% of Canada’s alfalfa seed production)

• 13.5 Million kg seed/yr = $40 Million$25 Million/yr in exports

• Bees = 30+% of seed value = $15 - 20 Million

Page 15: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories - Lowbush Blueberries

• Maritimes & Quebec• Canadian production – 300 Million kg/yr

• Exports = $323 Million

• Must be pollinated by bees– Buzz pollination– Wild bees (70+ species)– Honeybees

Page 16: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Blueberries & the Forest

• Blueberry Pie Ecosystem & Pesticides– During Fenitrothion

• This example: New Brunswick• Other similar examples:

Quebec, Ontario

Page 17: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Blueberries & the Forest

New Brunswick’s Blueberries, Bees, & Pesticide Story

Crop loss ≈ 0.7 million kg/year !

Fenitrothion

Page 18: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

• Solutions– Litigation– Restraining orders– More science• Other pesticides• Other pollinators• Other plants• Other places

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Blueberries & the Forest

Disrupted ecosystem function

Reduced pollinator diversity and abundance

Reduced fruit / seed set

Kevan & Plowright, 1970 -

Page 19: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – The Forest

• Solution – Tighter control on forest pesticide use– More emphasis on biocontrol– Recognition of pollinators in forest ecosystem

function

New Brunswick blueberry story was at the start of a major trend in pollinator

conservation worldwide

Page 20: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Greenhouse Tomatoes

• Still air

• Hand pollination– Labour costs $$$–Reliability–Timing

• Solution

Page 21: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canadian Stories – Greenhouse Tomatoes

• Bumblebee culture MB Plowright & Jay 1966

ON Kevan et al. 1991 BC Dogterom 1998 ON Morandin et al. 2001- 2 BC Winston team 2003-4

Page 22: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Value of Greenhouse Tomato Production (ca. 2009)

• 736 Acres in Ontario (75% of Canadian production)• $290 Million/year• Bumblebees @ 2 colonies/acre/month for 10 months

– 20 colonies @ $200 each/acre/year– $3.7 Million/year in Canada

Page 23: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Pollinator Biocontrol Biovectoring• Pollinators carry microorganisms (pollen incl.)• Can Biocontrol agents be carried by

pollinators?• Yes!– Entomopathogens of crop pest insects• Lygus, thrips, aphids, whitefly, moths, beetles

– Fungal antagonists to plant pathogens• Grey mould, mummy berry, Schlerotinia, Rhizopus, Phomopsis

Page 24: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Greenhouse Experimental set up

Each bumble bee hive was equipped with an inoculum dispenser.

Inoculum was placed inside a removable tray.

Page 25: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Greenhouse results: Lygus mortality though bee vectored

Beauvaria

TPB mortality

0

10

20

30

40

50

1st 2nd Sampling date

% M

orta

lity

B. Bassiana + bumble bees Bumble bees only No treatment

Page 26: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Clonostachys on Blueberry Pollinating Bumblebees for Mummyberry & Greymould

control

PEI Organic/Pesticide- free Blueberry Farm, 2009 – 2012 trials

Page 27: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Value of Honeybees for Crop Pollination (ca. 2009)

• Est. value = $1.3 to $1.7 Billion annually in Canada– 300,000 colonies for hybrid canola seed– 35,000 colonies for blueberries– 15,000 colonies for fruit trees– @ average $120/ colony = $42 Million in hive

rentals/year

• Honey = $110 Million/year (28 Million kg)

Page 28: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Initiatives on Pollination & Pollinator Shortages:Canada at the Forefront

• NRCanada (1981) Pesticide Pollinator Interactions

• AgCanada (1989) National Workshop, Winnipeg

• ESC (1997) Pollinators & Mother Earth

• Canadian participation in International & US meetings (1992, 1995-2012)

• US NRC (2007) Status of Pollinators in North America

Page 29: Pollination, Pollinators & Agriculture: Canadian  international leadership,  then  and now

Recent Canadian Initiatives

• CPPI – January, 2007 in Ottawa• CANPOLIN – NSERC Strategic Network Proposal: submitted February 2008 ($5 million)

• City of Guelph Pollination Park 7 March 2008• CPPI – Urban pollination, 8 March 2008• National Wildlife Week, 30 April 2008• Pollinator Conservation in Practice, 13 Nov. 2009

Funded Oct. 2008!