Abstract: "Public and scientific awareness of the connection between food security and pollination provided by both wild and managed insect species has heightened in recent decades1,2,3. Yet pollinator conservation has been difficult because it requires policies that intersect biodiversity, land use, agriculture and global trade4. Further, global analyses synthesizing information and making recommendations for pollinator conservation must account for diverse perspectives across varying scales, geographies, economies, systems and cultures. Writing in Nature Ecology & Evolution, Dicks and colleagues5 offer one approach to understanding how drivers and risks of pollinator decline vary in different parts of the world."
Read More: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-021-01531-y
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