| Literature DB >> 26943127 |
Miles Renauld1, Alena Hutchinson1, Gregory Loeb2, Katja Poveda1, Heather Connelly1,2.
Abstract
Bees provide critical pollination services to 87% of angiosperm plants; however, the reliability of these services may become threatened as bee populations decline. Agricultural intensification, resulting in the simplification of environments at the landscape scale, greatly changes the quality and quantity of resources available for female bees to provision their offspring. These changes may alter or constrain the tradeoffs in maternal investment allocation between offspring size, number and sex required to maximize fitness. Here we investigate the relationship between landscape scale agricultural intensification and the size and number of individuals within a wild ground nesting bee species, Andrena nasonii. We show that agricultural intensification at the landscape scale was associated with a reduction in the average size of field collected A. nasonii adults in highly agricultural landscapes but not with the number of individuals collected. Small females carried significantly smaller (40%) pollen loads than large females, which is likely to have consequences for subsequent offspring production and fitness. Thus, landscape simplification is likely to constrain allocation of resources to offspring through a reduction in the overall quantity, quality and distribution of resources.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26943127 PMCID: PMC4778946 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Model selection statistics for models describing inter-tegular distance and head capsule width as a function of percent agricultural land cover (cropland including pastures), cropland only, pastures only, natural and semi-natural cover (forest, fallows and open land), and percent cover of insect pollinated blooming crops at 750m and 1000m radii from the collection sites.
The overall best model and competing models (AICc ≤ 2) are bolded. Asterisks (*) indicate models with significant (p <0.05) terms.
| Response | AICc | ΔAICc | Scale | Metric | Coeff | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inter-tegular Distance | ||||||
| 14.28 | 2.45 | 1000m | Natural | 0.0061* | 0.136 | |
| 14.37 | 2.54 | 1000m | Cropland only | -0.0051* | 0.180 | |
| 15.58 | 3.75 | 1000m | Pastures | -0.0074* | 0.071 | |
| 18.00 | 6.17 | 1000m | Blooming Crops | -0.0039 | 0.010 | |
| Head Capsule Width | ||||||
| 28.40 | 2.31 | 1000m | All Agriculture | -0.0039* | 0.159 | |
| 29.02 | 2.93 | 750m | All Agriculture | 0.0034(*) | 0.117 | |
| 29.59 | 3.50 | 1000m | Natural | -0.0041 | 0.088 | |
| 30.07 | 3.98 | 1000m | Cropland only | -0.0033 | 0.069 | |
| 30.30 | 4.21 | 1000m | Blooming Crops | -0.0030 | 0.062 |
Fig 1Inter-tegular distances of adult female A. nasonii in relation to the percentage of agricultural land uses within a 1 km radius from the collection sites.
Fig 2Head capsule widths of adult female A. nasonii in relation to the percentage of pasture land within a 1 km radius from the collection sites.
Fig 3Average weight of pollen load (+/- SE) of small and large female A. nasonii collected while foraging on standardized strawberry plots.