Nebraska Farmer Logo

Native plant communities provide shelter, food and refuge for a wide range of beneficial insects.

July 13, 2020

4 Min Read
Monarch butterly on flower
HEALTHY ECOSYSTEMS: Pollinators such as beetles, flies, wasps, butterflies, moths and bees, many of which are found on Nebraska rangelands, are integral in maintaining healthy ecosystems.stevegeer/Getty Images

Native rangelands are well known for their importance as a forage resource to beef cattle and other livestock. These same rangelands are also an essential resource for smaller six-legged foragers: insect pollinators.

Insect pollinators include a diverse number of species of beetles, flies, wasps, butterflies, moths and bees, many of which are found on rangelands in Nebraska. Pollinators are integral in maintaining healthy ecosystems and food security for humans. But habitat loss, pesticide exposure, disease and climate change are putting pollinators at risk worldwide, and many have been reported to have declined over the past several decades.

To understand how rangelands can benefit pollinating insects, we must consider pollinator habitat requirements. Because pollinating insects come in many shapes and sizes, each species’ specific habitat needs differ.

General pollinator habitat requirements include season-long quality floral resources (nectar, pollen, flower leaves and petals), access to water, nest sites (stems, cavities and bare ground), host plants for some pollinators to lay eggs, and overwintering sites (soil, litter, and vegetation). Native rangelands are an important stronghold of natural habitat for pollinator insects.

Pollinators, rangelands matter

Rangelands offer large swaths of natural vegetation that can provide a continuity of habitat in increasingly fragmented landscapes. Native plant communities found within these areas provide shelter, food and refuge for a wide variety of beneficial insects including pollinators. Promoting, maintaining and enhancing pollinator habitat can even be incorporated into effective livestock grazing management goals. For example, rotating pastures to allow certain plants opportunities to flower before grazing.

Pollinators directly benefit rangeland plant communities by pollinating native flowering plants, which help stabilize the soil and shape a healthy and resilient ecosystem. Pollinators are an integral part of the food chain, as many game bird species rely on their immature grubs for nutrition.

Pollinators are also needed for the reproduction of many rare or endangered range plants. For example, the western prairie fringed orchid requires select species of hawkmoth that visits these flowers at night to drink nectar. Pollen attaches to the face of the moth and gets carried from one flower to the next.

Nebraska Sandhills habitat

Nebraska is home to 22 million acres of rangeland and pastureland, half of which are in the Sandhills. Beef production focuses on enhancing the productivity of nutrient-rich grasses that dominate Nebraska rangelands. However, healthy grasslands also contain a diversity of forbs and shrubs that offer food and resources to a wide variety of pollinating insects.

The Nebraska Sandhills contains a unique set of associated plants, with about 720 different plant species (90% identified as native species). This large unbroken expanse of native rangeland with its diversity of nutrient-rich forage makes is ideal for cattle grazing while providing habitat resources for pollinators. Warm- and cool-season grasses typically dominate the production of vegetation on Sandhills uplands (about 70% to 80% of the total plant production), but forbs and shrubs are an essential component of the plant community (about 15% to 25% of total plant production).

Forbs and shrubs make up the majority of pollinator plant lists due to nectar and pollen rewards they offer to insects in exchange for pollination. In 2017, the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission published the Nebraska Monarch and Pollinator Conservation Plan, complete with a list of native Nebraska plants for pollinators, including many plants found in the Nebraska Sandhills.

Last summer, the Sandhills Rangeland Monitoring Cooperative conducted vegetation monitoring on 70 upland “Sands” ecological sites on pastures across seven cooperating ranches in the western and central Sandhills. Forbs and shrubs made up 72% of the 94 total plant species found on the upland pastures monitored in 2019. Of the forbs and shrubs found monitoring in 2019, 28 are listed as pollinator plants for the Nebraska Monarch and Pollinator Conservation Plan.

Common names of pollinator plants found during range monitoring


Source: UNL BeefWatch

Although the SRMC project is not directly monitoring for pollinator habitat, it is important to acknowledge the role that healthy rangelands have in promoting insect pollinators. Next time you find yourself admiring the beauty of the Sandhills, take a moment to notice what flowering plants are around, and you may even happen upon one of a rangeland pollinators at work.

Mollet is SRMC research project coordinator; Milby is a research technologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln; and Stephenson is a Nebraska Extension range management specialist.

Source: UNL BeefWatch, which is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset.

Read more about:

Pollination
Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like