4.7 Article

Impacts of beekeeping on wild bee diversity and pollination networks in the Aegean Archipelago

期刊

ECOGRAPHY
卷 44, 期 9, 页码 1353-1365

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.05553

关键词

bee richness; competition; flower abundance; hive density; honey bee abundance; interaction networks

资金

  1. European Union (European Social Fund - ESF)
  2. Greek national funds through the Operational Program 'Education and Lifelong Learning' of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF) - Research Funding Program: THALES: POL-AEGIS [MIS 376737]
  3. Ramon y Cajal contract from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [RYC-2015-19034]
  4. Spanish State Research Agency
  5. European Social Funds (ESF invests in your future)
  6. University of the Balearic Islands
  7. Feder funds [CGL2017-89254-R]
  8. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [CGL2017-89254-R]
  9. Spanish Research Agency [CGL2017-89254-R]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examined the impact of honey bee density on wild bee diversity and pollination networks, revealing that increasing honey bee visitation rate had a negative effect on wild bee species richness and abundance, especially for wild bees in the Apidae family. Honey bees influenced the structure of wild bee pollination networks indirectly through changes in wild bee richness, leading to lower linkage density in sites with high honey bee abundance. The study cautions against intensifying beekeeping in areas with high bee diversity and highlights how the benefits of introducing honey bees for pollination services can be offset by negative impacts on wild bees and ecosystem services.
Maintaining the diversity of wild bees is a priority for preserving ecosystem function and promoting stability and productivity of agroecosystems. However, wild bee communities face many threats and beekeeping could be one of them, because honey bees may have a strong potential to outcompete wild pollinators when placed at high densities. Yet, we still know little about how beekeeping intensity affects wild bee diversity and their pollinator interactions. Here, we explore how honey bee density relates to wild bee diversity and the structure of their pollination networks in 41 sites on 13 Cycladic Islands (Greece) with similar landscapes but differing in beekeeping intensity. Our large-scale study shows that increasing honey bee visitation rate had a negative effect on wild bee species richness and abundance, although the latter effect was relatively weak compared to the effect of other landscape variables. Competition for flowering resources (as indicated by a resource sharing index) increased with the abundance of honey bees, but the effect was more moderate for wild bees in family Apidae than for bees in other families, suggesting a stronger niche segregation in Apidae in response to honey bees. Honey bees also influenced the structure of wild bee pollination networks indirectly, through changes in wild bee richness. Low richness of wild bees in sites with high honey bee abundance resulted in wild bee networks with fewer links and lower linkage density. Our results warn against beekeeping intensification in these islands and similar hotspots of bee diversity, and shed light on how benefits to pollination services of introducing honey bees may be counterbalanced by detriments to wild bees and their ecosystem services.

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