Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, Portland, Oregan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 May 22;19(5):e0303335. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303335. eCollection 2024.
In a time of increasing threats to bumble bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Bombus), it is important to understand their ecology and distribution. As experts are limited in resources to conduct field surveys, there is potential for community scientists to help. The Bumble Bee Watch (BBW) community science program involves volunteers taking photos of bumble bees in Canada and the USA and submitting them, along with geographic and optional plant information, to a website or through an app. Taxon experts then verify the bee species identification. The Bumble Bees of North America database (BBNA) stores data (no photographs) collected and identified by more traditional scientific methods over the same range. Here we compared BBW data to BBNA data over all years and just 2010-2020 to understand the scientific contribution of community scientists to the state of the knowledge about native bumble bees. We found that BBW had similar geographic and species coverage as BBNA. It had records from all 63 provinces, states, and territories where bumble bees occur (including four more than BBNA in 2010-2020), and represented 41 of the 48 species in BBNA (with ten more species than BBNA in 2010-2020). While BBW contributed only 8.50% of records overall, it contributed 25.06% of all records over 2010-2020. BBW confirmed the persistence of species and identified new locations of species, both inside and outside of the previously known extent of occurrences. BBW also contributed a wealth of ecological information, such as unique plant genera and species data for almost all the bee species. Thus, while BBW had fewer bee records than the BBNA database overall, it helped to fill in data gaps and provided novel information, complementing the traditional methods. This community science program is valuable in helping to inform conservation management for bumble bee species.
在熊蜂(膜翅目:蜜蜂科:熊蜂属)受到越来越多威胁的时代,了解它们的生态学和分布情况非常重要。由于专家资源有限,无法进行实地调查,因此社区科学家有可能提供帮助。“熊蜂观察”(BBW)社区科学项目涉及志愿者在加拿大和美国拍摄熊蜂的照片,并将照片以及地理和可选的植物信息提交到一个网站或通过一个应用程序。分类专家随后会验证蜜蜂物种的识别。“北美洲熊蜂数据库”(BBNA)存储了通过相同范围的更传统科学方法收集和识别的数据(没有照片)。在这里,我们比较了 BBW 数据和 BBNA 数据在所有年份和仅 2010-2020 年的数据,以了解社区科学家对有关本地熊蜂知识状况的科学贡献。我们发现,BBW 的地理和物种覆盖范围与 BBNA 相似。它记录了所有 63 个有熊蜂出没的省、州和地区(包括 2010-2020 年比 BBNA 多的四个地区),代表了 BBNA 中 41 种(2010-2020 年比 BBNA 多 10 种)。虽然 BBW 的记录仅占总数的 8.50%,但它在 2010-2020 年的记录中占所有记录的 25.06%。BBW 证实了物种的持续存在,并确定了物种的新地点,包括先前已知分布范围内外的地点。BBW 还提供了丰富的生态信息,例如几乎所有蜜蜂物种的独特植物属和物种数据。因此,虽然 BBW 的蜜蜂记录总数少于 BBNA 数据库,但它有助于填补数据空白并提供新的信息,补充了传统方法。该社区科学项目对于帮助为熊蜂物种的保护管理提供信息非常有价值。