Abstract

Increasing human land use for agriculture and housing leads to the loss of natural habitat and to widespread declines in wild bees. Bee foraging dynamics and fitness depend on the availability of resources in the surrounding landscape, but how precisely landscape related resource differences affect bee foraging patterns remains unclear. To investigate how landscape and its interaction with season and weather drive foraging and resource intake in social bees, we experimentally compared foraging activity, the allocation of foragers to different resources (pollen, nectar, and resin) and overall resource intake in the Australian stingless bee Tetragonula carbonaria (Apidae, Meliponini). Bee colonies were monitored in different seasons over twoyears. We compared foraging patterns and resource intake between the bees' natural habitat (forests) and two landscapes differently altered by humans (suburban gardens and agricultural macadamia plantations). We found foraging activity as well as pollen and nectar forager numbers to be highest in suburban gardens, intermediate in forests and low in plantations. Foraging patterns further differed between seasons, but seasonal variations strongly differed between landscapes. Sugar and pollen intake was low in plantations, but contrary with our predictions, it was even higher in gardens than in forests. In contrast, resin intake was similar across landscapes. Consequently, differences in resource availability between natural and altered landscapes strongly affect foraging patterns and thus resource intake in social bees. While agricultural monocultures largely reduce foraging success, suburban gardens can increase resource intake well above rates found in natural habitats of bees, indicating that human activities can both decrease and increase the availability of resources in a landscape and thus reduce or enhance bee fitness.

Highlights

  • Animal pollination is a key ecosystem function, and modern agriculture benefits from pollinators, bees, for the production of many crops (Klein et al 2007; Garibaldi et al 2013)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • Because plant resource availability and diversity in landscapes drive foraging dynamics in bees (Decourtye et al 2010; Jha and Kremen 2013), we investigated how foraging patterns and resource intake in a highly social bee species are affected by landscape related differences in resource availability

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Animal pollination is a key ecosystem function, and modern agriculture benefits from pollinators, bees, for the production of many crops (Klein et al 2007; Garibaldi et al 2013). Bee pollinators are under pressure from human activities (Winfree 2010), and bee decline is often linked to habitat change and loss Many natural habitats have been destroyed or fragmented by urbanization and agricultural intensification with parallel declines observed in the diversity and abundance of insect pollinators (Aizen and Feinsinger 1994; Steffan-Dewenter et al 2002; Ricketts 2004; Vanbergen & the Insect Pollinators Initiative 2013). Anthropogenic changes to habitat may confound underlying and interacting effects that regulate bee populations, such as food resource availability (Roulston and Goodell 2011). How landscape related differences in resource availability affect foraging patterns and resource intake of bees has received little attention

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call