scholarly journals Native and introduced bee abundances on carrot seed crops in New Zealand

2015 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 373-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.G. Howlett ◽  
G.O. Lankin-Vega ◽  
D.E. Pattemore

In New Zealand unmanaged bees species can be important crop pollinators but their abundance and distribution is poorly known within hybrid carrot seed crops Standardised counts of bees visiting flowering carrot umbels (1350 umbels observed/field) across 19 commercial hybrid fields were conducted between 1000 h and 1500 h Despite honey bees being observed in all fields abundance varied greatly between fields (mean981; maximum330 minimum1) Other bees observed visiting umbels were Lasioglossum sordidum (17 fields; mean14; maximum65); Leioproctus sp (12 fields; mean20; maximum19); Hylaeus sp (one field; maximum 1) and Bombus terrestris (six fields; mean20; maximum11) The number of individual bees (all species together) counted/ umbel on male fertile umbels was significantly higher than on male sterile umbels a factor that could contribute to suboptimal pollen flow between umbel lines by bees Examination of their movements between male fertile and sterile lines is required to verify their efficiency as pollinators

Insects ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Gaffney ◽  
Björn Bohman ◽  
Stephen Quarrell ◽  
Philip Brown ◽  
Geoff Allen

Pollination rates in hybrid carrot crops remain limited after introduction of honey bee hives. In this study, honey bee foraging behaviour was observed in commercial hybrid carrot seed crops. Significantly more visits were made to male-fertile (MF) rather than cytoplasmically male-sterile (CMS) flowers. Pollen was collected from bees returning to a hive, to determine daily variation in pollen loads collected and to what level the bees were foraging for carrot pollen. Honey bees visited a wide range of alternative pollen sources and made relatively few visits to carrot plants throughout the period of flowering. Visitation rates to other individual floral sources fluctuated but visitation to carrot was consistently low. The underlying rate of carrot pollen visits among collecting trips was modelled and estimated to be as low as 1.4%, a likely cause of the limited success implementing honey bee hives in carrot crops.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (9) ◽  
pp. 1168-1168
Author(s):  
R. S. Trivedi ◽  
J. G. Hampton ◽  
J. M. Townshend ◽  
M. V. Jaspers ◽  
H. J. Ridgway

Carrot (Daucus carota L.) seed lots produced in Canterbury, New Zealand are commonly infected by the fungal pathogen Alternaria radicina, which can cause abnormal seedlings and decayed seeds. In 2008, samples of 400 seeds from each of three carrot seed crops were tested for germination on moistened paper towels. On average, 30% of the seeds developed into abnormal seedlings or were decayed and were plated onto A. radicina selective agar (2) and acidified potato dextrose agar media and grown for 15 days at 22°C (10 h/14 h light/dark cycle) to confirm the presence of this pathogen (3). However, another fungus was isolated from an average of 8% of the seeds sampled. Colonies of the latter fungus grew faster than those of A. radicina, had smoother margins, and did not produce dendritic crystals or yellow pigment in the agar media. Although conidial size (30 to 59 × 18 to 20 μm), shape (long and ellipsoid), and color (dark olive-brown) were similar for the two fungi, conidia of this novel fungus had more transverse septa (average 3.6 cf. 3.0 per conidium) than those of A. radicina. On the basis of these morphological characteristics, the isolated fungus was identified as A. carotiincultae and the identity was confirmed by sequence analysis. PCR amplification of the β-tubulin gene from three isolates, using primers Bt1a (5′ TTCCCCCGTCTCCACTTCTTCATG 3′) and Bt1b (5′ GACGAGATCGTTCATGTTGAACTC 3′) (1), produced a 420-bp product for each isolate that was sequenced and compared with β-tubulin sequences present in GenBank. Sequences of all three New Zealand isolates (Accession Nos. HM208752, HM208753, and HM208754) were identical to each other and to six sequences in GenBank (Accession Nos. EU139354/57/58/59/61/62). There was a 2- to 4-bp difference between these sequences and those of A. radicina present in GenBank. Pathogenicity of the three New Zealand isolates of A. carotiincultae was verified on leaves and roots of 3-month-old carrot plants grown in a greenhouse (three plants per pot with 10 replicate pots per isolate). For each isolate, intact leaves of each plant were inoculated with 0.5 ml of a suspension of 106 conidia/ml and the tap root of each plant was inoculated with a 7-mm agar plug colonized by the isolate. Ten pots of control plants were treated similarly with sterile water and noncolonized agar plugs. Each pot was covered with a plastic bag for 12 h and then placed in a mist chamber in a greenhouse with automatic misting every 30 min. At 72 h after inoculation, symptoms comprising medium brown-to-black lesions on the leaves and dark brown-to-black sunken lesions on the roots were clearly visible on inoculated plants but not on the control plants. Reisolation attempts from roots and leaves demonstrated A. carotiincultae to be present in symptomatic leaves and roots of all inoculated plants but not in leaves or roots of the control plants. Symptoms produced by the isolates of A. carotiincultae were similar to those attributed to A. radicina in infected carrot seed fields in Canterbury. The former species may have caused field infections in carrot seed crops in Canterbury. A. carotiincultae was described as a new taxon in Ohio in 1995 (4), and pathogenicity of the species on carrot was reported in California (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. carotiincultae in New Zealand. References: (1) M. S. Park et al. Mycologia 100:511, 2008. (2) B. M. Pryor et al. Plant Dis. 78:452, 1994. (3) B. M. Pryor and R. L. Gilbertson. Mycologia 94:49, 2002. (4) E. G. Simmons. Mycotaxon 55:55, 1995.


2009 ◽  
Vol 62 ◽  
pp. 92-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.K. Walker ◽  
B.G. Howlett ◽  
J.A. McCallum ◽  
A.R. Wallace ◽  
D.A.J. Teulon

Brassica seed crops are grown throughout New Zealand and worldwide and intercrop and cropweed contamination through gene flow is a major concern For Brassica large arthropods (body length > 3 mm) particularly honey bees are the most important pollinators and are considered key vectors of pollen Small arthropods (body length < 3 mm) are also abundant in Brassica crops but their role as pollinators is rarely assessed Numerous small arthropods (particularly Diptera and Thysanoptera) were recorded within cages surrounding pak choi inflorescences that excluded large arthropods Inflorescences inside these cages set seed but seed set was significantly reduced compared with inflorescences in cages that were hand pollinated and uncaged inflorescences Although the presence of large arthropods significantly increased seed set the role of small arthropods and wind cannot be excluded in pak choi pollination Further studies are required to fully determine the role of small arthropods in long distance pollen flow


Author(s):  
R.G. Purves ◽  
P.T.P. Clifford ◽  
B.J. Donovan

The availability of large numbers of pollinators is critical to the efficient seed production of crosspollinated species of herbage legumes. The honey bee is the predominant pollinator of crops in New Zealand. There are risks in being solely dependent on the honey bee for pollination. Honey bee diseases and mites have reduced bee numbers in many parts of the world. The floral morphologies of some species such as tetraploid red clovers and lucerne are unsuited to pollination by honey bees. Other than in some localised areas, alternative pollinators have had little impact on improving pollination of these species in New Zealand. In 1995, Osmia coerulescens L. was introduced into New Zealand to be evaluated as an alternative, managed pollinator for herbage seed crops. Results from the 1997/98 season show that O. coerulescens can be stored at 2-3°C with low mortality until the bees are 9 months old. When stored to 10.5 months of age, reproductive vigour was lost and mortality was high. The potential multiplication rate of this bee is high, especially in the first generation of a season. Managing the bees to emerge during summer rather than spring as occurs naturally had no effect on bee reproduction. The bee also successfully reproduced when retricted to white clover flowers as the only source of pollen and nectar. The wasp parasitoid Melittobia spp. destroyed large numbers of developing bees resulting from the nesting of 2nd-generation bees. Control of Melittobia spp. is discussed. Keywords: management, Melittobia spp., Osmia coerulescens, pollination


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Mertes ◽  
Julie Carcaud ◽  
Jean-Christophe Sandoz

AbstractSociality is classified as one of the major transitions in evolution, with the largest number of eusocial species found in the insect order Hymenoptera, including the Apini (honey bees) and the Bombini (bumble bees). Bumble bees and honey bees not only differ in their social organization and foraging strategies, but comparative analyses of their genomes demonstrated that bumble bees have a slightly less diverse family of olfactory receptors than honey bees, suggesting that their olfactory abilities have adapted to different social and/or ecological conditions. However, unfortunately, no precise comparison of olfactory coding has been performed so far between honey bees and bumble bees, and little is known about the rules underlying olfactory coding in the bumble bee brain. In this study, we used in vivo calcium imaging to study olfactory coding of a panel of floral odorants in the antennal lobe of the bumble bee Bombus terrestris. Our results show that odorants induce reproducible neuronal activity in the bumble bee antennal lobe. Each odorant evokes a different glomerular activity pattern revealing this molecule’s chemical structure, i.e. its carbon chain length and functional group. In addition, pairwise similarity among odor representations are conserved in bumble bees and honey bees. This study thus suggests that bumble bees, like honey bees, are equipped to respond to odorants according to their chemical features.


Apidologie ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-251
Author(s):  
Elisabeth Fung ◽  
Kelly Hill ◽  
Katja Hogendoorn ◽  
Andrew B. Hingston ◽  
Richard V. Glatz

1995 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 129-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Corbineau ◽  
M. A. Picard ◽  
A. Bonnet ◽  
D. Côme

AbstractVarious sources of germination heterogeneity of carrot (Daucus carota L.) seeds were investigated: germination conditions (temperature, oxygen tension), size of seeds, position of the umbels on the mother plants, and pollination conditions of male-sterile plants in hybrid seed production. All seeds tested germinated over a large range of temperatures (5–35°C). However, low temperatures (5–10°C) and temperatures above 30°C reduced germination. Seeds were also sensitive to oxygen deprivation, but their sensitivity to hypoxia depended on the cultivar. The germination responses of seeds to temperature and oxygen depended on their size, particularly at sub- and supra-optimal temperatures. The largest seeds (1.8–2.1 mm) of commercial lots usually germinated better at 5°C and were more sensitive to oxygen deprivation than the smallest ones (1.2–1.8 mm). Experiments performed with open pollinated plants showed that seeds produced by umbels of first and second orders germinated faster and at higher percentages than those collected on third-order umbels. Evidence for the involvement of pollination conditions in the germination quality of carrot seeds was given by pollination by honey bees of male-sterile plants cultivated at various distances from the pollen donors. The longer the distance of the mother plants from the pollinating plants, the lower the seed yield, the heavier the mean seed weight, the more difficult the germination of seeds, and the higher their sensitivity to oxygen deprivation.


1980 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 99-102
Author(s):  
I.D. Eaden

The New Zealand Seed Certification Scheme has operated for almost 50 years, 12 as a member of the OECD Herbage and Oil Seed Scheme. The objective is to ensure that seed of high cultivar purity is available to the grower having regard to the criteria laid down for the inspection of seed crops. These include the origin of the seed, paddock history, isolation, a field inspection of the growing crop at the optimum time for the detection of contamination with other cultivars and species and certain specific diseases and weeds. Key words: New Zealand seed certification, field inspection.


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