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Life-history traits predict responses of wild bees to climate variation

Authors :
Gabriella L. Pardee
Sean R. Griffin
Michael Stemkovski
Tina Harrison
Zachary M. Portman
Melanie R. Kazenel
Joshua S. Lynn
David W. Inouye
Rebecca E. Irwin
Source :
Proc Biol Sci
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Life-history traits, which are physical traits or behaviours that affect growth, survivorship and reproduction, could play an important role in how well organisms respond to environmental change. By looking for trait-based responses within groups, we can gain a mechanistic understanding of why environmental change might favour or penalize certain species over others. We monitored the abundance of at least 154 bee species for 8 consecutive years in a subalpine region of the Rocky Mountains to ask whether bees respond differently to changes in abiotic conditions based on their life-history traits. We found that comb-building cavity nesters and larger bodied bees declined in relative abundance with increasing temperatures, while smaller, soil-nesting bees increased. Further, bees with narrower diet breadths increased in relative abundance with decreased rainfall. Finally, reduced snowpack was associated with reduced relative abundance of bees that overwintered as prepupae whereas bees that overwintered as adults increased in relative abundance, suggesting that overwintering conditions might affect body size, lipid content and overwintering survival. Taken together, our results show how climate change may reshape bee pollinator communities, with bees with certain traits increasing in abundance and others declining, potentially leading to novel plant–pollinator interactions and changes in plant reproduction.

Details

ISSN :
14712954
Volume :
289
Issue :
1973
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings. Biological sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....426e3dd0b7f7e925405403fe7ffe859e