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Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields”

Year 2018, Volume: 18 Issue: 1, 15 - 21, 30.11.2018

Abstract

There are many disquisitions that points
out the efficiency of bumblebees in the production of Solanum lycopersicum L. (tomato). Tomato flowers do not produce
nectar and also releasing pollen from the poricidal anthers can be possible if
only the bees use buzzing behavior. Although the plant is not an attractive
source for the bees, thanks to greenhouse technologies, we can use bumblebees
to pollinate tomatoes. In this study, our aim was to create a simple
pollination cage for field grown tomatoes and evaluate foraging behaviors of
commercial bumblebees in this cage. Within this scope, the pollen storages of
the hive were evaluated. The weather conditions in the microhabitats (inside
the hive, inside the cage, outside of the cage and 15 meters far from field)
were compared to see if the cage material changes temperature and/or humidity.
Yield analyses were applied both in open field and caged tomatoes. Solanum lycopersicum L. plant is
preferred by bumble bees unless there is a more attractive plant around. The
temperature values were found significantly different whereas humidity values
were not. As a result of the study, total tomato production and the numbers of
seeds were increased with the pollination of bees. We can claim that
pollination cages are also usable for the entomophilous plants production and
can be alternative systems for non-heating green houses.  

References

  • [1] VELTHUIS, H.H., VAN DOORN, A., (2006) A century of advances in bumblebee domestication and the economic and environmental aspects of its commercialization for pollination, Apidologie, 37(4): 421.
  • [2] KLEIN, A.-M., VAISSIERE, B.E., et al., (2007) Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 274(1608): 303-313.
  • [3] ABROL, D., SHANKAR, U., (2012) Pollination in oil crops: Recent advances and future strategies, in Technological innovations in major world oil crops, 2, 221-267.
  • [4] FREE, J., (1993) Insect pollination of crops. Acad, Press, London-New York: p. 172-180.
  • [5] DE LUCA, P.A., VALLEJO-MARÍN, M., (2013) What's the ‘buzz’about? The ecology and evolutionary significance of buzz-pollination, Current opinion in plant biology, 16(4): p. 429-435.
  • [6] KING, M.J., (1993) Buzz foraging mechanism of bumble bees, Journal of Apicultural Research, 32(1): 41-49.
  • [7] MORSE, A., KEVAN, P., et al., (2012) The impact of greenhouse tomato (solanales: Solanaceae) floral volatiles on bumble bee (hymenoptera: Apidae) pollination, Environmental entomology, 41(4): p. 855-864.
  • [8] VERGARA, C.H., FONSECA-BUENDÍA, P., (2012) Pollination of greenhouse tomatoes by the mexican bumblebee bombus ephippiatus (hymenoptera: Apidae), Journal of Pollination Ecology, 7.
  • [9] FAO, (2017) Food and agriculture organization of the united nations.
  • [10] TÜİK, (2016) Bitkisel üretim İstatistikleri, Türkiye İstatistik Kurumu.
  • [11] GARNETT, T., APPLEBY, M.C., et al., (2013) Sustainable intensification in agriculture: Premises and policies, Science, 341(6141): p. 33-34.
  • [12] WODEHOUSE, R.P., (1935) Pollen grains. Their structure, identification and significance in science and medicine, Pollen grains. Their structure, identification and significance in science and medicine.
  • [13] ERDTMAN, G., SARJEANT, W.A.S., et al., (1969 ,Handbook of palynology: Morphology, taxonomy, ecology: An introduction to the study of pollen grains and spores. Munksgaard Copenhagen.
  • [14] MARKGRAF, V., D'ANTONI, H., (1978) Pollen flora of argentina, Tucson: Arizona, University of Arizona Press viii, 208p.-Illus., map, keys.. Palynology. Geog, 4.
  • [15] D'ALBORE, G.R., (1997) Textbook of melissopalynology. Apimondia Publishing House.
  • [16] SORKUN, K., (2008) Türkiye'nin nektarlı bitkileri, polenleri ve balları. Palme Yayıncılık.
  • [17] TEPPNER, H., (2005) Pollinators of tomato, solanum l copersicum (solanaceae), in central europe.
  • [18] YANKIT, P., RANA, K., et al., (2018), Effect of bumble bee pollination on quality and yield of tomato (solanum lycopersicum mill.) grown under protected conditions, Int. J. Curr. Microbiol. App. Sci, 7(1): p. 257-263.
  • [19] STRANGE, J.P., (2015) Bombus huntii, bombus impatiens, and bombus vosnesenskii (hymenoptera: Apidae) pollinate greenhouse-grown tomatoes in western north america, Journal of Economic Entomology, 108(3): p. 873-879.
  • [20] WHITTINGTON, R., WINSTON, M.L., TUCKER, C., PARACHNOWITSCH, A.L., (2004) Plant-species identity of pollen collected by bumblebees placed in greenhouses for tomato pollination, Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 84(2): p. 599-602.
Year 2018, Volume: 18 Issue: 1, 15 - 21, 30.11.2018

Abstract

References

  • [1] VELTHUIS, H.H., VAN DOORN, A., (2006) A century of advances in bumblebee domestication and the economic and environmental aspects of its commercialization for pollination, Apidologie, 37(4): 421.
  • [2] KLEIN, A.-M., VAISSIERE, B.E., et al., (2007) Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 274(1608): 303-313.
  • [3] ABROL, D., SHANKAR, U., (2012) Pollination in oil crops: Recent advances and future strategies, in Technological innovations in major world oil crops, 2, 221-267.
  • [4] FREE, J., (1993) Insect pollination of crops. Acad, Press, London-New York: p. 172-180.
  • [5] DE LUCA, P.A., VALLEJO-MARÍN, M., (2013) What's the ‘buzz’about? The ecology and evolutionary significance of buzz-pollination, Current opinion in plant biology, 16(4): p. 429-435.
  • [6] KING, M.J., (1993) Buzz foraging mechanism of bumble bees, Journal of Apicultural Research, 32(1): 41-49.
  • [7] MORSE, A., KEVAN, P., et al., (2012) The impact of greenhouse tomato (solanales: Solanaceae) floral volatiles on bumble bee (hymenoptera: Apidae) pollination, Environmental entomology, 41(4): p. 855-864.
  • [8] VERGARA, C.H., FONSECA-BUENDÍA, P., (2012) Pollination of greenhouse tomatoes by the mexican bumblebee bombus ephippiatus (hymenoptera: Apidae), Journal of Pollination Ecology, 7.
  • [9] FAO, (2017) Food and agriculture organization of the united nations.
  • [10] TÜİK, (2016) Bitkisel üretim İstatistikleri, Türkiye İstatistik Kurumu.
  • [11] GARNETT, T., APPLEBY, M.C., et al., (2013) Sustainable intensification in agriculture: Premises and policies, Science, 341(6141): p. 33-34.
  • [12] WODEHOUSE, R.P., (1935) Pollen grains. Their structure, identification and significance in science and medicine, Pollen grains. Their structure, identification and significance in science and medicine.
  • [13] ERDTMAN, G., SARJEANT, W.A.S., et al., (1969 ,Handbook of palynology: Morphology, taxonomy, ecology: An introduction to the study of pollen grains and spores. Munksgaard Copenhagen.
  • [14] MARKGRAF, V., D'ANTONI, H., (1978) Pollen flora of argentina, Tucson: Arizona, University of Arizona Press viii, 208p.-Illus., map, keys.. Palynology. Geog, 4.
  • [15] D'ALBORE, G.R., (1997) Textbook of melissopalynology. Apimondia Publishing House.
  • [16] SORKUN, K., (2008) Türkiye'nin nektarlı bitkileri, polenleri ve balları. Palme Yayıncılık.
  • [17] TEPPNER, H., (2005) Pollinators of tomato, solanum l copersicum (solanaceae), in central europe.
  • [18] YANKIT, P., RANA, K., et al., (2018), Effect of bumble bee pollination on quality and yield of tomato (solanum lycopersicum mill.) grown under protected conditions, Int. J. Curr. Microbiol. App. Sci, 7(1): p. 257-263.
  • [19] STRANGE, J.P., (2015) Bombus huntii, bombus impatiens, and bombus vosnesenskii (hymenoptera: Apidae) pollinate greenhouse-grown tomatoes in western north america, Journal of Economic Entomology, 108(3): p. 873-879.
  • [20] WHITTINGTON, R., WINSTON, M.L., TUCKER, C., PARACHNOWITSCH, A.L., (2004) Plant-species identity of pollen collected by bumblebees placed in greenhouses for tomato pollination, Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 84(2): p. 599-602.
There are 20 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Structural Biology
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Tunç Dabak This is me

Çiğdem Özenirler

Publication Date November 30, 2018
Submission Date May 18, 2018
Published in Issue Year 2018 Volume: 18 Issue: 1

Cite

APA Dabak, T., & Özenirler, Ç. (2018). Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields”. Mellifera, 18(1), 15-21.
AMA Dabak T, Özenirler Ç.Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields.” mellifera. November 2018;18(1):15-21.
Chicago Dabak, Tunç, and Çiğdem Özenirler. “Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: ‘Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields’”. Mellifera 18, no. 1 (November 2018): 15-21.
EndNote Dabak T, Özenirler Ç (November 1, 2018) Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields”. Mellifera 18 1 15–21.
IEEE T. Dabak and Ç. Özenirler, “Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: ‘Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields’”, mellifera, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 15–21, 2018.
ISNAD Dabak, Tunç - Özenirler, Çiğdem. “Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: ‘Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields’”. Mellifera 18/1 (November 2018), 15-21.
JAMA Dabak T, Özenirler Ç. Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields”. mellifera. 2018;18:15–21.
MLA Dabak, Tunç and Çiğdem Özenirler. “Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: ‘Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields’”. Mellifera, vol. 18, no. 1, 2018, pp. 15-21.
Vancouver Dabak T, Özenirler Ç. Using Commercial Bumblebees in The Pollination of Field Grown Tomatoes A Case Study: “Caged Tomatoes in Open Fields”. mellifera. 2018;18(1):15-21.