Harnessing community science to conserve and study ground-nesting bee aggregations

IF 2.4 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution Pub Date : 2024-01-09 DOI:10.3389/fevo.2023.1347447
Jordan G. Kueneman, Cassidy N. Dobler, Bryan N. Danforth
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Abstract

Protecting diverse solitary ground-nesting bees remains a pivotal conservation concern. Ground-nesting bees are negatively impacted by anthropogenic land use change that often removes suitable nesting habitat from the landscape. Despite their enormous ecological and agricultural contributions to pollination, solitary, ground-nesting bees are often neglected, partly due to the significant obstacle of discovering exactly where these bees establish their nests. To address this limitation, we have developed a ‘community science’ project to map aggregations of ground-nesting bees globally. In certain locations, their abundances reach astounding levels, sometimes in the millions, but are scarcely known. Utilizing the iNaturalist platform, which permits geo-referencing of site observations and bee identification, we are providing public education and seeking public engagement to document bee aggregations in order to understand the nesting requirements of diverse species and open new opportunities for their conservation. Conservation priorities may then unequivocally be directed to areas of high species richness, nest densities, and nesting sites of rare bees. Such community-led efforts are vital for successful long-term management of native bees and the biotic and abiotic landscape data from nest-site localities can allow modeling to predict nest-site suitability and to readily test such predictions on the ground. Here, we summarize the progress, current limitations, and opportunities of using a global mapping project (GNBee) to direct conservation efforts and research toward solitary ground-nesting bees.
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利用社区科学保护和研究地巢蜂群
保护多种多样的独居地巢蜜蜂仍然是一个重要的保护问题。地巢蜜蜂受到人为土地利用变化的负面影响,这些变化往往会从景观中移除合适的筑巢栖息地。尽管它们在生态和农业授粉方面做出了巨大贡献,但独居地巢蜂却常常被忽视,部分原因是发现这些蜜蜂筑巢的确切地点存在巨大障碍。为了解决这个问题,我们开发了一个 "社区科学 "项目,绘制全球地巢蜂群图。在某些地方,它们的数量达到了惊人的水平,有时甚至数以百万计,但却鲜为人知。利用 iNaturalist 平台(该平台允许对观察地点进行地理参照和蜜蜂识别),我们正在开展公共教育并寻求公众参与,以记录蜜蜂的聚集情况,从而了解不同物种的筑巢要求,为保护它们提供新的机会。这样,保护的重点就可以明确地指向物种丰富度高、巢穴密度高和珍稀蜜蜂筑巢地多的地区。这种由社区主导的工作对于成功地长期管理本地蜜蜂至关重要,而来自巢址所在地的生物和非生物景观数据可以通过建模来预测巢址的适宜性,并可随时对这些预测进行实地检验。在此,我们总结了利用全球地图绘制项目(GNBee)将保护工作和研究引向独居地巢蜂的进展、目前的局限性和机遇。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
1143
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research across fundamental and applied sciences, to provide ecological and evolutionary insights into our natural and anthropogenic world, and how it should best be managed. Field Chief Editor Mark A. Elgar at the University of Melbourne is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics and the public worldwide. Eminent biologist and theist Theodosius Dobzhansky’s astute observation that “Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution” has arguably even broader relevance now than when it was first penned in The American Biology Teacher in 1973. One could similarly argue that not much in evolution makes sense without recourse to ecological concepts: understanding diversity — from microbial adaptations to species assemblages — requires insights from both ecological and evolutionary disciplines. Nowadays, technological developments from other fields allow us to address unprecedented ecological and evolutionary questions of astonishing detail, impressive breadth and compelling inference. The specialty sections of Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution will publish, under a single platform, contemporary, rigorous research, reviews, opinions, and commentaries that cover the spectrum of ecological and evolutionary inquiry, both fundamental and applied. Articles are peer-reviewed according to the Frontiers review guidelines, which evaluate manuscripts on objective editorial criteria. Through this unique, Frontiers platform for open-access publishing and research networking, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution aims to provide colleagues and the broader community with ecological and evolutionary insights into our natural and anthropogenic world, and how it might best be managed.
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