4.7 Article

Grassy-herbaceous land moderates regional climate effects on honey bee colonies in the Northcentral US

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac7063

Keywords

Apis mellifera; hive scale; pooled analysis; random forest; environmental filtering

Funding

  1. USDA-NIFA-AFRI [2019-67013-29297]
  2. Foundation for Food and Agricultural Research [549032]
  3. USDA Farm Service Agency [16IAMRECRPHBTA1]
  4. USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service [673A7514178]
  5. NSF-GRFP [DGE-1848739]
  6. Roger and Barbara Hoopingarner Endowed Graduate Fellowship in Entomology through MSU
  7. USDA-NIFA [2017-07141]
  8. North American Pollinator Protection Campaign Honey Bee Health Improvement Grant Program

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The lack of seasonally sustained floral resources is a global threat to pollinator health. This study used hive scales to assess nectar intake and developed a random forest regression model to analyze the impact of climate, weather, and land cover on honey bee colony productivity. The results show that warm, wet regions and high growing degree day accumulation have detrimental effects on nectar intake, while grassy-herbaceous natural land has a positive effect. These findings highlight the potential of using hive scales to monitor the effects of climate change on pollinator floral resources.
The lack of seasonally sustained floral resources (i.e. pollen and nectar) is considered a primary global threat to pollinator health. However, the ability to predict the abundance of flowering resources for pollinators based upon climate, weather, and land cover is difficult due to insufficient monitoring over adequate spatial and temporal scales. Here we use spatiotemporally distributed honey bee hive scales that continuously measure hive weights as a standardized method to assess nectar intake. We analyze late summer colony weight gain as the response variable in a random forest regression model to determine the importance of climate, weather, and land cover on honey bee colony productivity. Our random forest model predicted resource acquisition by honey bee colonies with 71% accuracy, highlighting the detrimental effects of warm, wet regions in the Northcentral United States on nectar intake, as well as the detrimental effect of years with high growing degree day accumulation. Our model also predicted that grassy-herbaceous natural land had a positive effect on the summer nectar flow and that large areas of natural grassy-herbaceous land around apiaries can moderate the detrimental effects of warm, wet climates. These patterns characterize multi-scale ecological processes that constrain the quantity and quality of pollinator nutritional resources. That is, broad climate conditions constrain regional floral communities, while land use and weather act to further modify the quantity and quality of pollinator nutritional resources. Observing such broad-scale trends demonstrates the potential for utilizing hive scales to monitor the effects of climate change on landscape-level floral resources for pollinators. The interaction of climate and land use also present an opportunity to manage for climate-resilient landscapes that support pollinators through abundant floral resources under climate change.

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