Otto Clint R V, Roth Cali L, Carlson Benjamin L, Smart Matthew D
Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, United States Geological Survey, Jamestown, ND 58401-7317
Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, United States Geological Survey, Jamestown, ND 58401-7317.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Sep 13;113(37):10430-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1603481113. Epub 2016 Aug 29.
Human reliance on insect pollination services continues to increase even as pollinator populations exhibit global declines. Increased commodity crop prices and federal subsidies for biofuel crops, such as corn and soybeans, have contributed to rapid land-use change in the US Northern Great Plains (NGP), changes that may jeopardize habitat for honey bees in a part of the country that supports >40% of the US colony stock. We investigated changes in biofuel crop production and grassland land covers surrounding ∼18,000 registered commercial apiaries in North and South Dakota from 2006 to 2014. We then developed habitat selection models to identify remotely sensed land-cover and land-use features that influence apiary site selection by Dakota beekeepers. Our study demonstrates a continual increase in biofuel crops, totaling 1.2 Mha, around registered apiary locations in North and South Dakota. Such crops were avoided by commercial beekeepers when selecting apiary sites in this region. Furthermore, our analysis reveals how grasslands that beekeepers target when selecting commercial apiary locations are becoming less common in eastern North and South Dakota, changes that may have lasting impact on pollinator conservation efforts. Our study highlights how land-use change in the NGP is altering the landscape in ways that are seemingly less conducive to beekeeping. Our models can be used to guide future conservation efforts highlighted in the US national pollinator health strategy by identifying areas that support high densities of commercial apiaries and that have exhibited significant land-use changes.
尽管传粉者种群在全球范围内呈下降趋势,但人类对昆虫授粉服务的依赖仍在不断增加。商品作物价格上涨以及对玉米和大豆等生物燃料作物的联邦补贴,导致美国北部大平原(NGP)土地利用迅速变化,这些变化可能危及美国超过40%蜂群的栖息地所在地区的蜜蜂栖息地。我们调查了2006年至2014年北达科他州和南达科他州约18000个注册商业养蜂场周围生物燃料作物产量和草地覆盖的变化。然后,我们开发了栖息地选择模型,以识别影响达科他州养蜂人选择养蜂场地点的遥感土地覆盖和土地利用特征。我们的研究表明,北达科他州和南达科他州注册养蜂场周围的生物燃料作物持续增加,总面积达120万公顷。商业养蜂人在该地区选择养蜂场地点时会避开此类作物。此外,我们的分析揭示了养蜂人在选择商业养蜂场地点时所瞄准的草地在北达科他州东部和南达科他州正变得越来越少,这些变化可能对传粉者保护工作产生持久影响。我们的研究强调了NGP地区的土地利用变化正在以似乎不利于养蜂的方式改变景观。我们的模型可用于指导美国国家传粉者健康战略中强调的未来保护工作,通过识别支持高密度商业养蜂场且土地利用发生显著变化的区域。