De Palma Adriana, Kuhlmann Michael, Roberts Stuart P M, Potts Simon G, Börger Luca, Hudson Lawrence N, Lysenko Igor, Newbold Tim, Purvis Andy
Department of Life Sciences Imperial College London Silwood Park Berkshire SL5 7PY UK; Department of Life Sciences Natural History Museum Cromwell Road London SW7 5BD UK.
Department of Life Sciences Natural History Museum Cromwell Road London SW7 5BD UK.
J Appl Ecol. 2015 Dec;52(6):1567-1577. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.12524. Epub 2015 Sep 23.
Bees are a functionally important and economically valuable group, but are threatened by land-use conversion and intensification. Such pressures are not expected to affect all species identically; rather, they are likely to be mediated by the species' ecological traits.Understanding which types of species are most vulnerable under which land uses is an important step towards effective conservation planning.We collated occurrence and abundance data for 257 bee species at 1584 European sites from surveys reported in 30 published papers (70 056 records) and combined them with species-level ecological trait data. We used mixed-effects models to assess the importance of land use (land-use class, agricultural use-intensity and a remotely-sensed measure of vegetation), traits and trait × land-use interactions, in explaining species occurrence and abundance.Species' sensitivity to land use was most strongly influenced by flight season duration and foraging range, but also by niche breadth, reproductive strategy and phenology, with effects that differed among cropland, pastoral and urban habitats. . Rather than targeting particular species or settings, conservation actions may be more effective if focused on mitigating situations where species' traits strongly and negatively interact with land-use pressures. We find evidence that low-intensity agriculture can maintain relatively diverse bee communities; in more intensive settings, added floral resources may be beneficial, but will require careful placement with respect to foraging ranges of smaller bee species. Protection of semi-natural habitats is essential, however; in particular, conversion to urban environments could have severe effects on bee diversity and pollination services. Our results highlight the importance of exploring how ecological traits mediate species responses to human impacts, but further research is needed to enhance the predictive ability of such analyses.
蜜蜂是一个在功能上很重要且具有经济价值的群体,但正受到土地利用转换和集约化的威胁。预计这些压力对所有物种的影响并不相同;相反,它们可能由物种的生态特征所介导。了解哪些类型的物种在何种土地利用方式下最易受到影响,是迈向有效保护规划的重要一步。我们从30篇已发表论文中报告的调查中整理了欧洲1584个地点的257种蜜蜂的出现和丰度数据(70056条记录),并将它们与物种水平的生态特征数据相结合。我们使用混合效应模型来评估土地利用(土地利用类别、农业利用强度和植被遥感测量)、特征以及特征×土地利用相互作用在解释物种出现和丰度方面的重要性。物种对土地利用的敏感性受飞行季节持续时间和觅食范围影响最大,但也受生态位宽度、繁殖策略和物候的影响,这些影响在农田、牧区和城市栖息地有所不同。与其针对特定物种或环境,保护行动如果聚焦于缓解物种特征与土地利用压力强烈且负面相互作用的情况,可能会更有效。我们发现有证据表明,低强度农业可以维持相对多样的蜜蜂群落;在更集约化的环境中,增加花卉资源可能有益,但需要根据较小蜜蜂物种的觅食范围谨慎放置。然而,保护半自然栖息地至关重要;特别是,向城市环境的转变可能会对蜜蜂多样性和授粉服务产生严重影响。我们的结果凸显了探索生态特征如何介导物种对人类影响的反应的重要性,但需要进一步研究以提高此类分析的预测能力。