Biology Department, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Institut de Recherche en Biologie Végétale, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
PeerJ. 2023 Feb 3;11:e14699. doi: 10.7717/peerj.14699. eCollection 2023.
The spatial heterogeneity of urban landscapes, relatively low agrochemical use, and species-rich floral communities often support a surprising diversity of wild pollinators in cities. However, the management of Western honey bees ( L.) in urban areas may represent a new threat to wild bee communities. Urban beekeeping is commonly perceived as an environmentally friendly practice or a way to combat pollinator declines, when high-density beekeeping operations may actually have a negative influence on native and wild bee populations through floral resource competition and pathogen transmission. On the Island of Montréal, Canada there has been a particularly large increase in beekeeping across the city. Over the years following a large bee diversity survey ending in 2013, there was an influx of almost three thousand honey bee colonies to the city. In this study, we examined the wild bee communities and floral resources across a gradient of honey bee abundances in urban greenspaces in 2020, and compared the bee communities at the same sites before and after the large influx of honey bees. Overall, we found a negative relationship between urban beekeeping, pollen availability, and wild bee species richness. We also found that honey bee abundance had the strongest negative effect on small (inter-tegular span <2.25 mm) wild bee species richness. Small bee species may be at higher risk in areas with abundant honey bee populations as their limited foraging range may reduce their access to floral resources in times of increased competition. Further research on the influence of urban beekeeping on native and wild pollinators, coupled with evidence-based beekeeping regulations, is essential to ensure cities contain sufficient resources to support wild bee diversity alongside managed honey bees.
城市景观的空间异质性、相对较低的农用化学品使用量以及物种丰富的花卉群落,通常为城市中的野生传粉者提供了令人惊讶的多样性。然而,西方蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)在城市地区的管理可能代表了对野生蜜蜂群落的新威胁。城市养蜂通常被认为是一种环保实践,或者是对抗传粉媒介减少的一种方式,但高密度的养蜂作业实际上可能通过花卉资源竞争和病原体传播对本地和野生蜜蜂种群产生负面影响。在加拿大蒙特利尔岛,全市的养蜂业增长尤其显著。在 2013 年结束的一项大型蜜蜂多样性调查之后的几年里,有将近三千个蜂蜜蜂群涌入该市。在这项研究中,我们于 2020 年在城市绿地中调查了不同蜜蜂蜜蜂丰度梯度下的野生蜜蜂群落和花卉资源,并比较了养蜂大量涌入前后同一地点的蜜蜂群落。总体而言,我们发现城市养蜂、花粉可利用性和野生蜜蜂物种丰富度之间呈负相关关系。我们还发现,蜜蜂丰度对小型(间腹板跨度<2.25 毫米)野生蜜蜂物种丰富度的负面影响最强。在有大量蜜蜂种群的地区,小型蜜蜂物种可能面临更高的风险,因为它们有限的觅食范围可能会降低它们在竞争加剧时获取花卉资源的能力。需要进一步研究城市养蜂对本地和野生传粉媒介的影响,并结合基于证据的养蜂法规,以确保城市拥有足够的资源,在管理蜜蜂的同时支持野生蜜蜂的多样性。