2019
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13456
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Habitat enhancements rescue bee body size from the negative effects of landscape simplification

Abstract: The negative effects of landscape simplification on bee communities are well documented. To reverse these effects, flowering habitat enhancements are designed to provide supplemental nutritional resources for wild bees and are particularly important when few resources are available in the surrounding landscape. Yet, it is not known whether or how habitat enhancements support bee populations under varying landscape contexts. Body size is a morphological trait that is strongly linked to foraging ability, immune … Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…In the field, bees experience numerous interacting stressors ( e.g. decreased floral diversity, increased pesticide exposure, and competition with honey bees 68 ), often being smaller in more simplified agricultural landscapes 69 72 . As such, we do not know if small individuals that were infected succumbed to the negative health consequence of the pathogens (and therefore were not out foraging for us to collect and screen), while larger individuals could tolerate the infections and thus bias the patterns.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the field, bees experience numerous interacting stressors ( e.g. decreased floral diversity, increased pesticide exposure, and competition with honey bees 68 ), often being smaller in more simplified agricultural landscapes 69 72 . As such, we do not know if small individuals that were infected succumbed to the negative health consequence of the pathogens (and therefore were not out foraging for us to collect and screen), while larger individuals could tolerate the infections and thus bias the patterns.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible that the restorations themselves insulate bee communities from agricultural simplification. Recent work has shown that restorations improve bee community health through increased colonization and persistence (M'Gonigle, Ponisio, Cutler, & Kremen, 2015), higher intraspecific bee species body sizes (Grab et al., 2019) and increasing community heterogeneity in comparison to unrestored controls (Ponisio et al., 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous work has emphasized the effects of land use change on whole communities, yet insect functional traits are also affected by land use change. In pollinators for example, land use change can decrease body size ( Persson and Smith, 2011 ; Renauld et al, 2016 ; Grab et al, 2019 ), which can negatively affect the pollination services provided to plants ( Jauker et al, 2016 ). While landscape mediated functional trait evolution is not well studied, we expect these trait expression shifts are present across insect groups and important in mediating insect interactions with plants.…”
Section: Implications For Complex Plant-mediated Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%