'Pollination Management' is the label for horticultural practices that accomplish or enhance
pollination of a crop, to improve yield or quality, by understanding of the particular crop's pollination needs, and by knowledgeable management of
pollenizers,
pollinators, and pollination conditions.
Pollinator decline
''Main article:
Pollinator decline''
With the decline of both wild and domestic pollinator populations, pollination management is becoming an increasingly important part of
horticulture. Factors that cause the
loss of pollinators include
pesticide misuse, unprofitability of
beekeeping for
honey, rapid transfer of pests and diseases to new areas of the globe, urban/suburban development, changing crop patterns,
clearcut logging (particularly when mixed forests are replaced by
monoculture pine), clearing of hedgerows and other wild areas, loss of nectar corridors for migratory pollinators, and human paranoia of stinging insects (
killer bee hype).
In 1989, following
Hurricane Hugo, massive aerial applications for
mosquitoes were done in
South Carolina. The following year, watermelon growers who did not place
beehives in the fields, observed the fruit begin to develop, then abort, or develop into small deformed fruit. There were entire fields that never yielded a single usable melon. Some growers went out of business; others began to seriously manage pollination. Since beekeepers were also heavily damaged by the mosquito spraying, the supply of bees for pollination was critically short for several years.
Importance of pollination management
The increasing size of fields and orchards (
monoculture) increase the importance of pollination management. Monoculture can cause a brief period when pollinators have more food resources than they can use, while other periods of the year can bring starvation or pesticide contamination of food sources. Most pollinator species rely on a steady
nectar source and
pollen source throughout the growing season to build up their numbers.

'Honeybee on domestic plum blossom'
Honey bees are especially well adapted to collecting and moving pollen,thus are the most commonly used pollinators. Note the light brown
pollen in the
pollen basket.
Crops that traditionally have had managed pollination include
apple,
almonds,
pears, some
plum and
cherry varieties,
blueberries,
cranberries,
cucumbers,
cantaloupe,
watermelon,
alfalfa seeds,
onion seeds, and many others. Some crops that have traditionally depended entirely on chance pollination by wild pollinators need pollination management nowadays to make a profitable crop.

Placing honey bees for pumpkin pollination
Mohawk Valley, NY
Some crops, especially when planted in a monoculture situation, require a very high level of pollinators to produce economically viable crops. This may be because of lack of attractiveness of the blossoms, or from trying to pollinate with an alternative when the native pollinator is extinct or rare. These include crops such as alfalfa, cranberries, and
kiwifruit. This technique is known as
saturation pollination. In many such cases, various native bees are vastly more efficient at pollination (e.g., with blueberries
[1]), but the inefficiency of the honey bees is compensated for by using large numbers of hives, the total number of foragers thereby far exceeding the local abundance of native pollinators. In a very few cases, it has been possible to develop commercially viable pollination techniques that use the more efficient pollinators, rather than continued reliance on honey bees, as in the management of the
alfalfa leafcutter bee.
See also:
List of plants pollinated by bees
Types of pollinators
Organisms that are currently being used as pollinators in managed pollination are
honey bees,
bumblebees,
alfalfa leafcutter bees,
orchard mason bees, and fuzzyfooted bees. Other species are expected to be added to this list as this field develops. Humans also can be pollinators, as the gardener who
hand pollinates her
squash blossoms, or the
Middle Eastern farmer, who climbs his
date palms to pollinate them.
The
Cooperative extension service recommends one honeybee hive per acre (4,000 m² per hive) for standard watermelon varieties to meet this crop's pollination needs. In the past, when fields were small, pollination was accomplished by a mix of bees kept on farms, bumblebees, carpenter bees, feral honey bees in hollow trees and other insects. Today, with melons planted in large tracts, the grower may no longer have hives on the farm; he may have poisoned many of the pollinators by spraying blooming cotton; he may have logged off the woods, removing hollow trees that provided homes for bees, and pushed out the hedgerows that were home for solitary native bees and other pollinating insects.
Planning for improved pollination

Date pollinator up a 'Abid Rahim' palm tree
Before pollination needs were understood, orchardists often planted entire blocks of apples of a single variety. Because apples are self sterile, and different members of a single variety are genetic
clones (equivalent to a single plant), this is not a good idea. Growers now supply pollenizers, by planting
crab apples interspersed in the rows, or by grafting crab apple limbs on some trees. Pollenizers can also be supplied by putting drum bouquets of crab apples or a compatible apple variety in the orchard blocks.
The field of pollination management cannot be placed wholly within any other field, because it bridges several fields. It draws from
horticulture,
apiculture,
zoology (especially
entomology),
ecology, and
botany.

US migratory commercial beekeeper moving spring bees from South Carolina to Maine for blueberry pollination
External Links
★
Insect Pollination Of Cultivated Crop Plants S.E. McGregor,
USDA, 1976
★
Raising awareness among Canadians about plant pollinators and the importance of monitoring and conserving themJ. A. Dyer, Seeds of Diversity Canada, Feb. 2006
References
1. Javorek SK, Mackenzie KE, Vander Kloet SP (2002) Comparative pollination effectiveness among bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) on Lowbush Blueberry (Ericaceae: ''Vaccinium angustifolium''). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 95: 345–351