The distribution of wild bee species along a Latitudinal gradient in northern Europe depends on their flower preferences
收藏DataCite Commons2025-06-01 更新2025-05-10 收录
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.wdbrv1608
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Aim The functional diversity of bees contributes to the maintenance of
plant biodiversity because different species of wild bees prefer and
pollinate different plants. Many bees, in particular species with narrow
flower preferences or specialized habitat requirements are threatened by
landscape homogenization and climate change. Nonetheless, we still lack an
understanding of large-scale impacts of anthropogenic stressors on the
distribution of wild bee species with different flower preferences.
Location Northern Europe: Norway, Denmark and Germany.
Methods We combine a dataset comprising ~30 000 observations of presences or absences of bee occurrences from structured surveys at 269 sites in northern Europe to investigate if flower preferences modulate species distributions across multiple environmental gradients. Bees were assigned a continuous functional trait separating preference for short vs tubular flowers. Results We observe that bee flower preference for either tubular flowers (Fabaceae) or plants with shallow flowers (including Apiaceae and Brassicaceae) can be described by a continuous flower preference trait score. The likelihood of observing a bee along a latitudinal gradient – encompassing variation in temperature, atmospheric N deposition and elevation – is dependent on its flower preference trait score. Specifically, bees with preferences for tubular flowers has a higher likelihood of occurrence with higher latitudes, while bees with preference for non-tubular flowers increase towards the south. Main conclusions Our results improve our understanding of how species-specific variation in flower preferences drives community-wide shifts in diversity and can therefore help devise region-specific conservation strategies.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2025-05-05



