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Roadside habitat: Boon or bane for pollinating insects?
Summary
This review examines whether roadside habitats serve as beneficial or harmful environments for pollinating insects. While roadsides can provide floral resources for declining pollinator populations, they also expose insects to vehicle collisions, toxic pollutants, mowing, and herbicides. The study recommends that managers and policymakers carefully weigh these costs and benefits when planning pollinator-focused roadside habitat management.
Pollinators, which provide vital services to wild ecosystems and agricultural crops, are facing global declines and habitat loss. As undeveloped land becomes increasingly scarce, much focus has been directed recently to roadsides as potential target zones for providing floral resources to pollinators. Roadsides, however, are risky places for pollinators, with threats from vehicle collisions, toxic pollutants, mowing, herbicides, and more. Although these threats have been investigated, most studies have yet to quantify the costs and benefits of roadsides to pollinators and, therefore, do not address whether the costs outweigh the benefits for pollinator populations using roadside habitats. In this article, we address how, when, and under what conditions roadside habitats may benefit or harm pollinators, reviewing existing knowledge and recommending practical questions that managers and policymakers should consider when planning pollinator-focused roadside management.
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