2019
DOI: 10.3390/su12010293
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Wild Bee Conservation within Urban Gardens and Nurseries: Effects of Local and Landscape Management

Abstract: Across urban environments, vegetated habitats provide refuge for biodiversity. Gardens (designed for food crop production) and nurseries (designed for ornamental plant production) are both urban agricultural habitats characterized by high plant species richness but may vary in their ability to support wild pollinators, particularly bees. In gardens, pollinators are valued for crop production. In nurseries, ornamental plants rarely require pollination; thus, the potential of nurseries to support pollinators has… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
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“…Earlier research highlighted the potential of urban green spaces in terms of providing diverse nesting and forage sources to pollinators, which have decreased in rural areas [5,12]. On the other hand, the production of crops in peri-urban and urban areas may benefit from a pollination ecosystem service flow from these green refugia [13,15,54]. We add new findings on the potential of gardens to provide an enhanced quality of forage resources for pollinators [18,49].…”
Section: Rates Of Pesticide-contamination In Gardens Vs Orchardsmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…Earlier research highlighted the potential of urban green spaces in terms of providing diverse nesting and forage sources to pollinators, which have decreased in rural areas [5,12]. On the other hand, the production of crops in peri-urban and urban areas may benefit from a pollination ecosystem service flow from these green refugia [13,15,54]. We add new findings on the potential of gardens to provide an enhanced quality of forage resources for pollinators [18,49].…”
Section: Rates Of Pesticide-contamination In Gardens Vs Orchardsmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Domestic gardens are defined as an area adjacent to a domestic dwelling [51]. Aside from the benefits in terms of human health and well-being, air cooling or support of biodiversity [12,13,[52][53][54], the misuse of fertilizers and pesticides in domestic gardens [55], out of any institutional control, may pose a risk to pollinators. On the other hand, a lower intensity of agrochemicals use in gardens than in the agricultural landscape could be expected on the basis of earlier research [18,49].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This Special Issue covers a broad geographical range, with contributions from Africa [17], Asia [18][19][20], Australia [21,22], Europe [23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30] and North America [31][32][33]. It explores a range of ecosystems in the urban realm, spans natural remnants such as forests [30,32], wetlands [18,21], and natural grasslands [17,22], traditional urban greenspaces including cemeteries [33], gardens [29,31], and, finally, novel urban ecosystems such as green roofs and constructed wetlands [20,26], built-up areas [23], railway bridges [24] and emerging forests on vacant land [27]. In combination, a wide range of socio-cultural and environmental settings are explored and discussed.…”
Section: Geographical Range and Systems Addressedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several papers explore biodiversity in relation to diverse features of urban environments and address a range of animal groups [21,24,27,31,33] and plants [17,18,20,22,27,30,32], including some multi-taxa studies [24,26,27]. Other papers explicitly address urban environments as socio-ecological systems [19,22,25], or further methodological approaches in understanding the people-nature intersection in cities [23,28,29].…”
Section: Geographical Range and Systems Addressedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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