Historical changes in northeastern US bee pollinators related to shared ecological traits
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey · Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Pollinators such as bees are essential to the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. However, despite concerns about a global pollinator crisis, long-term data on the status of bee species are limited. We present a long-term study of relative rates of change for an entire regional bee fauna in the northeastern United States, based on >30,000 museum records representing 438 species. Over a 140-y period, aggregate native species richness weakly decreased, but richness declines were significant only for the genus Bombus. Of 187 native species analyzed individually, only three declined steeply, all of these in the genus Bombus. However, there were large shifts in community composition, as indicated by 56% of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 78.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
7- ÍBÍgnasi BartomeusCorresponding
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- JSJohn S. Ascher
American Museum of Natural History, National University of Singapore
- JGJason Gibbs
Cornell University
- BNBryan N. Danforth
Cornell University
- DLDavid L. Wagner
University of Connecticut
Topics & keywords
- Species richness
- Pollinator
- Abundance (ecology)
- Ecology
- Relative species abundance
- Biology
- Fauna
- Biodiversity
- Life in Land