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引进的蜜蜂取代了本地蜜蜂,减少了对一种本地野花的授粉。

Honey bee introductions displace native bees and decrease pollination of a native wildflower.

机构信息

Department of Entomology and Nematology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.

出版信息

Ecology. 2023 Feb;104(2):e3939. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3939. Epub 2023 Jan 3.

Abstract

Introduced species can have cascading effects on ecological communities, but indirect effects of species introductions are rarely the focus of ecological studies. For example, managed honey bees (Apis mellifera) have been widely introduced outside their native range and are increasingly dominant floral visitors. Multiple studies have documented how honey bees impact native bee communities through floral resource competition, but few have quantified how these competitive interactions indirectly affect pollination and plant reproduction. Such indirect effects are hard to detect because honey bees are themselves pollinators and may directly impact pollination through their own floral visits. The potentially huge but poorly understood impacts that non-native honey bees have on native plant populations combined with increased pressure from beekeepers to place hives in U.S. National Parks and Forests makes exploring impacts of honey bee introductions on native plant pollination of pressing concern. In this study, we used experimental hive additions, field observations, as well as single-visit and multiple-visit pollination effectiveness trials across multiple years to untangle the direct and indirect impacts of increasing honey bee abundance on the pollination of an ecologically important wildflower, Camassia quamash. We found compelling evidence that honey bee introductions indirectly decrease pollination by reducing nectar and pollen availability and competitively excluding visits from more effective native bees. In contrast, the direct impact of honey bee visits on pollination was negligible, and, if anything, negative. Honey bees were ineffective pollinators, and increasing visit quantity could not compensate for inferior visit quality. Indeed, although the effect was not statistically significant, increased honey bee visits had a marginally negative impact on seed production. Thus, honey bee introductions may erode longstanding plant-pollinator mutualisms, with negative consequences for plant reproduction. Our study calls for a more thorough understanding of the indirect effects of species introductions and more careful coordination of hive placements.

摘要

引入物种会对生态群落产生级联效应,但物种引入的间接效应很少成为生态研究的焦点。例如,已被管理的蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)已被广泛引入其原生范围之外,并且越来越成为主要的访花者。多项研究记录了蜜蜂如何通过争夺花源资源来影响本地蜜蜂群落,但很少有研究量化这些竞争相互作用如何间接地影响授粉和植物繁殖。这种间接影响很难被察觉,因为蜜蜂本身就是传粉者,它们自己的访花行为可能会直接影响授粉。非本地蜜蜂对本地植物种群的潜在巨大但理解甚少的影响,再加上养蜂人在美国国家公园和森林中放置蜂箱的压力越来越大,这使得探索蜜蜂引入对本地植物授粉的影响成为当务之急。在这项研究中,我们使用了实验性的蜂箱添加、实地观察以及跨多年的单次和多次访花授粉效率试验,来理清增加蜜蜂数量对生态重要的野生花卉 Camassia quamash 授粉的直接和间接影响。我们有充分的证据表明,蜜蜂的引入通过减少花蜜和花粉的可利用性以及通过竞争排斥更有效的本地蜜蜂的访花来间接降低授粉。相比之下,蜜蜂访花对授粉的直接影响可以忽略不计,如果有的话,甚至是负面的。蜜蜂是低效的传粉者,增加访花量并不能弥补较差的访花质量。事实上,尽管这种影响在统计学上并不显著,但增加的蜜蜂访花对种子生产有轻微的负面影响。因此,蜜蜂的引入可能会破坏长期存在的植物-传粉者共生关系,对植物繁殖产生负面影响。我们的研究呼吁更深入地了解物种引入的间接效应,并更谨慎地协调蜂箱的放置。

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