Literature DB >> 29244556

Seasonal Food Scarcity Prompts Long-Distance Foraging by a Wild Social Bee.

Nathaniel S Pope, Shalene Jha.   

Abstract

Foraging is an essential process for mobile animals, and its optimization serves as a foundational theory in ecology and evolution; however, drivers of foraging are rarely investigated across landscapes and seasons. Using a common bumblebee species from the western United States (Bombus vosnesenskii), we ask whether seasonal decreases in food resources prompt changes in foraging behavior and space use. We employ a unique integration of population genetic tools and spatially explicit foraging models to estimate foraging distances and rates of patch visitation for wild bumblebee colonies across three study regions and two seasons. By mapping the locations of 669 wild-caught individual foragers, we find substantial variation in colony-level foraging distances, often exhibiting a 60-fold difference within a study region. Our analysis of visitation rates indicates that foragers display a preference for destination patches with high floral cover and forage significantly farther for these patches, but only in the summer, when landscape-level resources are low. Overall, these results indicate that an increasing proportion of long-distance foraging bouts take place in the summer. Because wild bees are pollinators, their foraging dynamics are of urgent concern, given the potential impacts of global change on their movement and services. The behavioral shift toward long-distance foraging with seasonal declines in food resources suggests a novel, phenologically directed approach to landscape-level pollinator conservation and greater consideration of late-season floral resources in pollinator habitat management.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bumblebee; dispersal; phenology; pollination; spatial ecology

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29244556     DOI: 10.1086/694843

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  4 in total

1.  Environmental and anthropogenic influences on movement and foraging in a critically endangered lemur species, Propithecus tattersalli: implications for habitat conservation planning.

Authors:  Meredith A Semel; Heather N Abernathy; Brandon P Semel; Michael J Cherry; Tsioriniaina J C Ratovoson; Ignacio T Moore
Journal:  Mov Ecol       Date:  2022-04-15       Impact factor: 5.253

Review 2.  Rapid changes in seed dispersal traits may modify plant responses to global change.

Authors:  Jeremy S Johnson; Robert Stephen Cantrell; Chris Cosner; Florian Hartig; Alan Hastings; Haldre S Rogers; Eugene W Schupp; Katriona Shea; Brittany J Teller; Xiao Yu; Damaris Zurell; Gesine Pufal
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2019-03-28       Impact factor: 3.276

3.  Consistent pollen nutritional intake drives bumble bee (Bombus impatiens) colony growth and reproduction across different habitats.

Authors:  Anthony D Vaudo; Liam M Farrell; Harland M Patch; Christina M Grozinger; John F Tooker
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-05-02       Impact factor: 2.912

4.  When beggars are choosers-How nesting of a solitary bee is affected by temporal dynamics of pollen plants in the landscape.

Authors:  Anna S Persson; Florence Mazier; Henrik G Smith
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-05-15       Impact factor: 2.912

  4 in total

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