USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Athens, 320 Green Street, Athens, Georgia, 30602, USA.
Tall Timbers Research Station, 13093 Henry Beadel Dr., Tallahassee, Florida, 32312, USA.
Sci Rep. 2020 Feb 19;10(1):2916. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-59878-4.
Much of the once-dominant longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) ecosystem has been lost from the Coastal Plain of the southeastern United States and only a few scattered remnants of primary forest remain. Despite much interest in understanding and restoring this ecosystem, relatively few studies have attempted to characterize or assess the conservation status of the longleaf bee fauna. The objective of this study was to compare the diversity and composition of bee communities between primary and mature secondary (>100 years old) fire-maintained forests in Georgia and Florida. We used colored pan traps to sample bees at three primary and four secondary locations divided between two regions characterized by sandy (Eglin Air Force Base) or clayey (Red Hills) soils. There were no overall differences between primary and secondary forests in bee richness, diversity, evenness or abundance. Community composition differed among locations but we found no evidence that primary remnants provide critical habitat to sensitive bee species.
曾经占据主导地位的长叶松(Pinus palustris Mill.)生态系统已经从美国东南部的沿海平原上消失了,只剩下少数几个原始森林的残余。尽管人们对了解和恢复这个生态系统非常感兴趣,但相对较少的研究试图描述或评估长叶松蜜蜂区系的保护状况。本研究的目的是比较佐治亚州和佛罗里达州主要和成熟的次生(> 100 年)火维持森林之间的蜜蜂多样性和组成。我们使用彩色盘式陷阱在三个主要和四个次生地点进行蜜蜂采样,这些地点分为两个具有沙质(埃格林空军基地)或粘质土壤(红山)特征的地区。在蜜蜂丰富度、多样性、均匀度或丰度方面,主要森林和次生森林之间没有总体差异。群落组成在不同地点有所不同,但我们没有证据表明原始残余物为敏感蜜蜂物种提供了关键栖息地。