糖心视频


Biodiversity strengthens pollinators and ensures stable yields, sunflower study finds

Biodiversity strengthens pollinators and ensures stable yields
An earth bumblebee, a stone bumblebee and a honeybee in one of the sunflower fields investigated as part of the study. Credit: Valentina Vey

Improving biodiversity and maintaining yields at the same time? For many, this sounds like a contradiction in terms. However, a new study by the University of W眉rzburg shows that both are possible under the right conditions.

For their study, researchers from the University of W眉rzburg (JMU), together with the Bavarian State Institute for Agriculture, analyzed 29 sunflower fields in northern Bavaria鈥15 organically and 14 conventionally farmed. They wanted to know which factors influence wild pollinators and how this affects agricultural yields. They took into account both the conditions in individual fields and the structure of the surrounding landscape.

To determine the contribution of insects, they used a simple experiment: some sunflower heads were protected from pollinators with fine nets, others were left open. The result: On average, freely pollinated sunflowers achieved around 25% higher yields鈥攔egardless of whether they were grown on organically or conventionally farmed fields.

The study is in the Journal of Applied Ecology.

Different requirements, common benefits

The analysis showed clear differences between different pollinator groups: "Bumblebees, for example, benefited from a high proportion of organically farmed fields," explains Denise Bertleff, first author of the study and biologist at the Department of Animal Ecology. "We were able to show that if you increase the proportion of such areas from 10% to 20%, this almost doubles the bumblebee population."

The abundance of solitary bees, on the other hand, is based on the size of semi-natural habitats such as hedges, calcareous grasslands or orchards. "Our study shows that agriculture can be organized in a way that promotes biodiversity," says Bertleff. "A diverse landscape, for example by deliberately leaving weeds standing, makes harvests more stable and safeguards biodiversity."

Study provides recommendations for practical action

The researchers used their data to derive several recommendations for action for farmers, policymakers and nature conservation advisors:

  • Manage more land in a region organically: This strengthens the number of pollinators鈥攅ven on conventional fields.
  • Preserve semi-natural habitats such as hedges, calcareous grasslands and orchards: Such areas are essential for pollinators, especially for solitary bees.
  • Allow moderate amounts of weeds: They provide important food sources for wild bees and hoverflies without necessarily reducing yields.
  • Avoid excessively large flowering areas: If too many crops flower in one area at the same time, there is a risk of dilution effects because pollinators are spread over larger areas. This can reduce pollination performance in individual fields.

More information: Denise Bertleff et al, Wild pollinators and honeybees respond differently to landscape鈥恠cale organic farming and increase sunflower yields, Journal of Applied Ecology (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Applied Ecology

Citation: Biodiversity strengthens pollinators and ensures stable yields, sunflower study finds (2025, September 25) retrieved 11 October 2025 from /news/2025-09-biodiversity-pollinators-stable-yields-sunflower.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Smaller fields and organic crops can boost pollinator diversity in grasslands

0 shares

Feedback to editors