Pollinator, pollen, and cultivar identity drive crop quality

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Tscharntke, T
Ocampo-Ariza, C
Kämper, W
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2024
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Abstract

Animal pollination enhances a third of global food production, yet the roles of pollinator, pollen, and cultivar identity in shaping crop quality, such as nutritional, sensory, and marketing value, are underexplored. Crop quality often depends on pollinator movement patterns, which vary with cultivar selection and spatial arrangement, pollen donor identity, and landscape context. Transfer of the right pollen between cultivars may fail, as pollen is often not transported far, even by highly dispersive pollinators, reducing cross-pollination and crop quality. Both pollinator identity and complementary spatiotemporal activity of diverse pollinators can shape crop quality. Here, we argue that promoting crop quality needs better understanding of species-specific pollinator behaviour and cultivar distribution patterns, rather than only focusing on enhancing pollinator densities.

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Trends in Plant Science

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© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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This publication has been entered in Griffith Research Online as an advance online version.

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Tscharntke, T; Ocampo-Ariza, C; Kämper, W, Pollinator, pollen, and cultivar identity drive crop quality, Trends in Plant Science, 2024

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