Department of Integrative Biology, The University of Texas at Austin, 205 West 24th Street, 401 Biological Laboratories, Austin, Texas, 78712, USA.
Central Texas Melittological Institute, 7307 Running Rope, Austin, Texas, 78731, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2019 Apr;29(3):e01869. doi: 10.1002/eap.1869. Epub 2019 Mar 20.
It is critical to understand the specific drivers of biodiversity across multiple spatial scales, especially within rapidly urbanizing areas, given the distinct management recommendations that may result at each scale. However, drivers of biodiversity patterns and interactions between drivers are often only measured and modeled at a single scale. In this study, we assessed bee community composition at three time periods in 20 grassland and 20 agriculture sites located across two major metroplexes. We examined how local environmental variables and surrounding landscape composition impact bee abundance, richness, and evenness, including comparisons between groups with different nesting strategies and body sizes. We collected nearly 13,000 specimens and identified 172 species. We found that levels of regional land use differentially impacted bee abundance and diversity depending on local habitat management. Specifically, within agriculture sites, bee richness was greater with increasing landscape-level seminatural habitat, while in grassland sites, bee richness was similar across landscapes regardless of seminatural habitat cover. Bee evenness at both site types declined with increasing landscape-level habitat heterogeneity, due to an increase of rare species at the grassland sites, but not in the agricultural sites, further indicating that diversity is driven by the interaction of local habitat quality and landscape-level habitat composition. We additionally found that agriculture sites supported higher abundances, but not richness, of small-bodied and below-ground nesting bees, while grassland sites supported higher abundances of aboveground nesting bees, and higher richness of large-bodied species. Increased levels of local bare ground were significantly related to multiple metrics of bee diversity, including greater belowground nesting bee abundance and richness. Local floral richness was also significantly related to increases of overall bee abundance, as well as the abundance and richness of small bees. Overall, we suggest that local land managers can support bee abundance and diversity by conserving areas of bare soil and promoting native floral diversity, the latter especially critical in highly urban agricultural spaces. Our results provide the first documentation of significant interactions between local habitat management and landscape composition impacting insect communities in urban systems, indicating that bee conservation practices depend critically on land use interactions across multiple spatial scales.
理解生物多样性在多个空间尺度上的具体驱动因素至关重要,特别是在快速城市化地区,因为这可能导致在每个尺度上产生不同的管理建议。然而,生物多样性模式的驱动因素以及驱动因素之间的相互作用通常仅在单一尺度上进行测量和建模。在这项研究中,我们在两个主要都会区的 20 个草地和 20 个农业地点的三个时间段评估了蜜蜂群落组成。我们研究了当地环境变量和周围景观组成如何影响蜜蜂的丰度、丰富度和均匀度,包括对具有不同筑巢策略和体型大小的群体进行比较。我们收集了近 13000 个标本并鉴定了 172 个物种。我们发现,区域土地利用水平根据当地生境管理的不同,对蜜蜂的丰度和多样性产生不同的影响。具体而言,在农业点内,随着景观水平上半自然生境的增加,蜜蜂的丰富度增加,而在草地点内,无论半自然生境的覆盖如何,蜜蜂的丰富度都相似。由于在草地点中稀有物种的增加,两种类型的地点的蜜蜂均匀度都随景观水平上生境异质性的增加而下降,这进一步表明多样性是由当地生境质量和景观水平上生境组成的相互作用驱动的。我们还发现,农业点支持更多数量的小型和地下筑巢蜜蜂,但丰富度较低,而草地点支持更多数量的地上筑巢蜜蜂,以及更多数量的大型物种。当地裸地水平的增加与蜜蜂多样性的多个指标显著相关,包括地下筑巢蜜蜂数量和丰富度的增加。当地花卉丰富度也与整体蜜蜂数量的增加以及小型蜜蜂的数量和丰富度显著相关。总体而言,我们认为当地土地管理者可以通过保护裸地面积和促进本地花卉多样性来支持蜜蜂的丰度和多样性,后者在高度城市化的农业空间中尤为关键。我们的结果首次证明了当地生境管理和景观组成之间的显著相互作用会对城市系统中的昆虫群落产生影响,这表明蜜蜂保护实践在很大程度上取决于多个空间尺度上的土地利用相互作用。