4.7 Article

Evidence for habitat and climatic specializations driving the long-term distribution trends of UK and Irish bumblebees

Journal

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages 864-875

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12344

Keywords

Biological invasions; bumblebees; climate; habitat; species distribution modelling

Funding

  1. University of Sussex, UK
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/J014753/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  3. BBSRC [BB/J014753/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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AimThere is widespread concern over the current state of global pollinator populations; however, lack of monitoring means patterns of decline are not well characterized. We aimed to investigate the influence of habitat and climate specializations on bumblebee distribution trends over time using long-term species data. LocationOur study is based on data from the UK and Ireland, for which the most comprehensive set of bumblebee records exists. Previous analysis of theUK data highlighted severe range contractions for a number of species by the 1980s. MethodsWe use the most current dataset to quantify the extent of range change over three time periods (pre-1960, 1960-80 and 1981-2012) and to investigate whether species are becoming more marginal, that is occupying areas with more extreme or specialized climatic conditions within the UK and Ireland. For species that have contracted or become more marginal, we predict their climatic specialization within the UK and Ireland using Maxent models, allowing us to associate records with climatic suitability values for each time period and to investigate whether or not species are contracting towards their climatic optimum. ResultsWe find that populations of most rare bumblebee species appear to have stabilized post-1980, while the more common species appear to have expanded in range. However, rare species tend to have become more marginal in the sites they occupy post-1980, some have contracted towards their predicted climatic optimum and some of which also retracted towards coastal areas. Main conclusionsOur results provide a mixed picture of the state of the UK and Ireland's bumblebee fauna, and must be interpreted with caution as changing patterns of recorder effort may distort real trends. They highlight the need for future monitoring of the abundance of pollinators on both a regional and global scale.

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