Abstract
Conversion of agricultural and degraded lands to solar energy production provides opportunities to support diverse bee communities-and their pollination services-by creating habitat at solar facilities. Habitat restoration for bees at solar facilities follows the general principle of installing a diverse flowering plant community and assuming bees will come. However, selecting seed mixes for solar facilities is challenging because selected plants need to establish in the unique abiotic conditions of solar facilities and not interfere with solar energy production (tall plants may shade panels). Recent research tested commercially available and bespoke pollinator mixes for establishment success in Minnesota solar facilities and identified 14 forb species that established successfully over three years of the experiment. We ask an important follow-up question: how many native bee species, and which bee species, are these 14 plant species capable of supporting? We used a plant-bee interaction data set from Minnesota to calculate the number of bee species that would be supported by the 14 plant species for the duration of their flight seasons using a published bee species richness function. We found 122 unique bee species (24% of Minnesota diversity) may be supported for their entire flight seasons by the 14 focal plants.
Original language | American English |
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Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Environmental Research Communications |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2025 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/JA-6A20-92343
Keywords
- agrivoltaics
- biodiversity
- ecosystem services
- ecovoltaics
- habitat restoration
- pollination
- renewable energy