Response diversity to land use occurs but does not consistently stabilise ecosystem services provided by native pollinators.

More diverse biological communities may provide ecosystem services that are less variable over space or time. However, the mechanisms underlying this relationship are rarely investigated empirically in real-world ecosystems. Here, we investigate how a potentially important stabilising mechanism, response diversity, the differential response to environmental change among species, stabilises pollination services against land-use change. We measured crop pollination services provided by native bees across land-use gradients in three crop systems. We found that bee species responded differentially to increasing agricultural land cover in all three systems, demonstrating that response diversity occurs. Similarly, we found response diversity in pollination services in two of the systems. However, there was no evidence that response diversity, in general, stabilised ecosystem services. Our results suggest that either response diversity is not the primary stabilising mechanism in our system, or that new measures of response diversity are needed that better capture the stabilising effects it provides.

[1]  S. McNaughton Diversity and Stability of Ecological Communities: A Comment on the Role of Empiricism in Ecology , 1977, The American Naturalist.

[2]  C. S. Holling Cross-Scale Morphology, Geometry, and Dynamics of Ecosystems , 1992 .

[3]  K. MacKenzie Pollination Requirements of Three Highbush Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) Cultivars , 1997 .

[4]  M. Loreau,et al.  Biodiversity and ecosystem productivity in a fluctuating environment: the insurance hypothesis. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[5]  A. Kinzig,et al.  Original Articles: Plant Attribute Diversity, Resilience, and Ecosystem Function: The Nature and Significance of Dominant and Minor Species , 1999, Ecosystems.

[6]  D. Tilman THE ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF CHANGES IN BIODIVERSITY: A SEARCH FOR GENERAL PRINCIPLES101 , 1999 .

[7]  David Tilman,et al.  Biodiversity, Stability, and Productivity in Competitive Communities , 2000, The American Naturalist.

[8]  C Arrowsmith,et al.  Analysis of aggregation, a worked example: numbers of ticks on red grouse chicks , 2001, Parasitology.

[9]  J. Thomson,et al.  Pollen removal and deposition by honeybee and bumblebee visitors to apple and almond flowers , 2001 .

[10]  Neal M. Williams,et al.  Crop pollination from native bees at risk from agricultural intensification , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[11]  David R. Anderson,et al.  Model Selection and Multimodel Inference , 2003 .

[12]  David R. Anderson,et al.  Model selection and multimodel inference : a practical information-theoretic approach , 2003 .

[13]  Garry D. Peterson,et al.  Response diversity, ecosystem change, and resilience , 2003 .

[14]  J. Cane,et al.  Dose-response relationships between pollination and fruiting refine pollinator comparisons for cranberry (Vaccinium macrocarpon [Ericaceae]). , 2003, American journal of botany.

[15]  Teja Tscharntke,et al.  Fruit set of highland coffee increases with the diversity of pollinating bees , 2003, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[16]  Martin Solan,et al.  Extinction and Ecosystem Function in the Marine Benthos , 2004, Science.

[17]  Neal M. Williams,et al.  The area requirements of an ecosystem service: crop pollination by native bee communities in California , 2004 .

[18]  F. Chapin,et al.  EFFECTS OF BIODIVERSITY ON ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING: A CONSENSUS OF CURRENT KNOWLEDGE , 2005 .

[19]  C. Kremen Managing ecosystem services: what do we need to know about their ecology? , 2005, Ecology letters.

[20]  L. Fahrig,et al.  Body size affects the spatial scale of habitat–beetle interactions , 2005 .

[21]  N. Williams,et al.  Extinction order and altered community structure rapidly disrupt ecosystem functioning. , 2005, Ecology letters.

[22]  D. Srivastava,et al.  Biodiversity-Ecosystem Function Research: Is It Relevant to Conservation? , 2005 .

[23]  J. McNeil,et al.  Fruit production in cranberry (Ericaceae: Vaccinium macrocarpon): a bet-hedging strategy to optimize reproductive effort. , 2006, American journal of botany.

[24]  P. Balvanera,et al.  Quantifying the evidence for biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning and services. , 2006, Ecology letters.

[25]  A. Klein,et al.  Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops , 2007, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[26]  P. Reich,et al.  Biodiversity and ecosystem stability in a decade-long grassland experiment , 2006, Nature.

[27]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Stability and Diversity of Ecosystems , 2007, Science.

[28]  P. Legendre,et al.  vegan : Community Ecology Package. R package version 1.8-5 , 2007 .

[29]  C. Kremen,et al.  Are ecosystem services stabilized by differences among species? A test using crop pollination , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[30]  O. Petchey,et al.  Testing a biological mechanism of the insurance hypothesis in experimental aquatic communities. , 2009, The Journal of animal ecology.

[31]  B. Wilsey,et al.  Biodiversity, productivity and the temporal stability of productivity: patterns and processes. , 2009, Ecology letters.

[32]  A. Klein,et al.  Natural enemy diversity reduces temporal variability in wasp but not bee parasitism , 2009, Oecologia.

[33]  R. Ostfeld,et al.  Hosts as ecological traps for the vector of Lyme disease , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[34]  P. Manley,et al.  Effects of Urban Development on Ant Communities: Implications for Ecosystem Services and Management , 2009, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[35]  T. Dawson,et al.  Quantifying the Contribution of Organisms to the Provision of Ecosystem Services , 2009 .

[36]  Peter J. Bellingham,et al.  Punching above their weight: low‐biomass non‐native plant species alter soil properties during primary succession , 2009 .

[37]  R. Isaacs,et al.  Community and Species-Specific Responses of Wild Bees to Insect Pest Control Programs Applied to a Pollinator-Dependent Crop , 2010, Journal of economic entomology.

[38]  H. D. Cooper,et al.  Scenarios for Global Biodiversity in the 21st Century , 2010, Science.

[39]  J. Soussana,et al.  Diversity Promotes Temporal Stability across Levels of Ecosystem Organization in Experimental Grasslands , 2010, PloS one.

[40]  Angela Young,et al.  Maintenance of Positive Diversity-Stability Relations along a Gradient of Environmental Stress , 2010, PloS one.

[41]  Jessie A. Wells,et al.  Land-use intensification reduces functional redundancy and response diversity in plant communities. , 2010, Ecology letters.

[42]  R. Isaacs,et al.  Stability of pollination services decreases with isolation from natural areas despite honey bee visits. , 2011, Ecology letters.

[43]  G. Daily,et al.  Resilience and stability in bird guilds across tropical countryside , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[44]  P. Reich,et al.  High plant diversity is needed to maintain ecosystem services , 2011, Nature.

[45]  Jeffrey D. Lozier,et al.  Patterns of widespread decline in North American bumble bees , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[46]  Ignasi Bartomeus,et al.  Climate-associated phenological advances in bee pollinators and bee-pollinated plants , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[47]  G. Daily,et al.  Biodiversity loss and its impact on humanity , 2012, Nature.

[48]  Sean R Connolly,et al.  Diversity and stability of herbivorous fishes on coral reefs. , 2012, Ecology.

[49]  Breno M. Freitas,et al.  Wild Pollinators Enhance Fruit Set of Crops Regardless of Honey Bee Abundance , 2013, Science.

[50]  Takehiro Sasaki,et al.  Response diversity determines the resilience of ecosystems to environmental change , 2013, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.