Foraging traits modulate stingless bee community disassembly under forest loss

Journal of Animal Ecology
2017
Lichtenberg, Elinor M.; Mendenhall, Chase D.; Brosi, Berry
PublisherBritish Ecological Society
Source N/A
Volume / Issue86/6
Pages1404-1416
Total Pages12 pages
Article Link
ISBN N/A
DOIdoi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12747
Editor(s) N/A
Conference / Book Title N/A
Flag N/A
Tagsbiodiversity; community disassembly; fourth-corner problem; functional traits; land use change; Meliponini; pollination; stingless bees
Other N/A
Conference Title N/A
Conference Date N/A
Publication DateAugust 20, 2017
Article Date N/A
GS Citation N/A
Abstract Anthropogenic land use change is an important driver of impacts to biological communities and the ecosystem services they provide. Pollination is one ecosystem service that may be threatened by community disassembly. Relatively little is known about changes in bee community composition in the tropics, where pollination limitation is most severe and land use change is rapid. Understanding how anthropogenic changes alter community composition and functioning has been hampered by high variability in responses of individual species. Trait‐based approaches, however, are emerging as a potential method for understanding responses of ecologically similar species to global change. We studied how communities of tropical, eusocial stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) disassemble when forest is lost. These bees are vital tropical pollinators that exhibit high trait diversity, but are under considerable threat from human activities. We compared functional traits of stingless bee species found in pastures surrounded by differing amounts of forest in an extensively deforested landscape in southern Costa Rica. Our results suggest that foraging traits modulate competitive interactions that underlie community disassembly patterns. In contrast to both theoretical predictions and temperate bee communities, we found that stingless bee species with the widest diet breadths were less likely to persist in sites with less forest. These wide‐diet‐breadth species also tend to be solitary foragers, and are competitively subordinate to group‐foraging stingless bee species. Thus, displacement by dominant, group‐foraging species may make subordinate species more dependent on the larger or more diversified resource pool that natural habitats offer. We also found that traits that may reduce reliance on trees—nesting in the ground or inside nests of other species—correlated with persistence in highly deforested landscapes. The functional trait perspective we employed enabled capturing community processes in analyses and suggests that land use change may disassemble bee communities via different mechanisms in temperate and tropical areas. Our results further suggest that community processes, such as competition, can be important regulators of community disassembly under land use change. A better understanding of community disassembly processes is critical for conserving and restoring pollinator communities and the ecosystem services and functions they provide.
Created: 12/10/2018 11:28 AM (ET)
Modified: 12/10/2018 11:28 AM (ET)
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