Abstract

Simple SummaryMany bees and wasps are important pollinators and natural pest controllers. Habitat loss is a major threat to bee and wasp conservation, but little is known about how this impacts tropical bees and wasps. This study aimed to determine how habitat loss affects solitary bees and wasps in tropical agricultural landscapes and how they change with the seasons. Solitary bees and wasps can be monitored using trap nests, popularly known as “bee hotels”. We installed bee hotels in forests and orchards and checked them every season over two years. We found 41 species of bees and wasps nesting in bee hotels. Importantly, five species of bees and 14 species of wasps were found only in forests, mostly species with particular food or nesting requirements. More species of bees and wasps used the hotels in the wet season (spring-summer). Our study suggests that solitary bees and wasps with special resource requirements are vulnerable to habitat loss in tropical agricultural landscapes.(1) Background: Landscape simplification is a major threat to bee and wasp conservation in the tropics, but reliable, long-term population data are lacking. We investigated how community composition, diversity, and abundance of tropical solitary bees and wasps change with landscape simplification (plant diversity, plant richness, distance from forest, forest cover, and land use type) and season. (2) Methods: We installed 336 timber and cob trap nests in four complex forests and three simplified orchards within the subtropical biodiversity hotspot of south-east Queensland, Australia. Trap nests were replaced every season for 23 months and all emergents identified. (3) Results: We identified 28 wasp species and 13 bee species from 2251 brood cells. Bee and wasp community composition changed with landscape simplification such that large, ground-nesting, and spider-hunting species were present in all landscapes, while those with specialist resource requirements and (clepto) parasitoids were present only in complex landscapes. Abundance and diversity of bees and wasps were unaffected by landscape simplification but increased with rainfall. (4) Conclusions: This study highlights the need for multi-year studies incorporating nuanced measures such as composition with a focus on functional diversity to detect changes bee and wasp populations.

Highlights

  • Simplified landscapes are landscapes with little variation in land cover types, vertical vegetation structure, and plant diversity [1,2]

  • We found that the composition of bee communities changed with land use type, amount of forest cover, distance to forest, plant diversity, and richness

  • Wasp community composition differed with land use type, amount of forest cover, and distance to forest, but not plant diversity or richness

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Summary

Introduction

Simplified landscapes are landscapes with little variation in land cover types, vertical vegetation structure, and plant diversity [1,2]. Agricultural expansion is the largest contributor to landscape simplification worldwide [3,4]. Simplified landscapes provide less resource diversity, niches, and species diversity than complex landscapes such as forests [2,5,6]. Landscape simplification is known to alter the abundance and diversity of many taxonomic groups, including birds [7], mammals [8], and invertebrates such as bees and wasps [9]. Bees and wasps provide essential pollination and pest management services, yet can be very sensitive to landscape simplification [10,11]. Maintaining bee and wasp communities in simplified landscapes, such as agroecosystems, requires an understanding of their responses to respective changes in the landscape

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