Agri Kultuur February / Februarie 2016 | Page 51

Article by Dr Ruan Veldtman Researcher of the South African National Biodiversity Institute and Stellenbosch University Photo: commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32721811 S mallholder farmers that go the extra mile to attract more wild bees and other pollinating insects to their land could harvest up to 24% more fruit or crops as a result. They can harness nature’s free pollination service by planting flower strips, using pesticides more carefully and restoring natural areas around their farms. This is the advice from a fiveyear long global study on pollinators, which was reported on in the leading journal Science and includes data collected in Limpopo. It also notes that large-scale commercial farming cannot reap the same benefits using only these methods, and will remain reliant on managed honey bee hives to ensure that enough food is produced. The paper is among others coauthored by ecological entomologist Dr Ruan Veldtman of the South African National Biodiversity Institute and Stellenbosch University. It stems from the Global Action on Pollination Services for Sustainable Agriculture Project (GPP)), funded by the Global Environmental Facility and co-ordinated by the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO). The project commenced in 2010 and collected data in 344 fields of small and large holdings in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Nepal, Pakistan, South Africa and Zimbabwe. It noted the number and variety of pollinators in each field, and the yield of each crop over a five-year period. It also recorded the resources (such as plants that produce pollen and serve as forage) needed to ensure that local populations of wild bees remain healthy enough to continue providing free pollination services. Dr Veldtman was among a host of pollination experts and ecologists that contributed to the study. The South African data used in the publication was collected by SANBI scientists in a sunflower seed producing area in Limpopo. The GPP also fully or partially funded the postgraduate research of two MSc students and two PhD students at Stellenbosch University’s Faculty of AgriSciences on matters relating to the pollination of apples and hybrid seed onions and forage to support managed honey bees. “Pollinators are an all-important link in the cycle of food production,” says Dr Veldtman, who explains that most flowering plants (including many that are used for food) only produce seeds with the help of animal pollinators. “We need to treasure our wild bee populations as well the managed honey bees that our beekeepers set out in orchards and fields to ensure that pollination takes place.” Pollinating insects are however on the decrease. This is because of the