Building height matters: nesting activity of bees and wasps on vegetated roofs

IF 1.3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution Pub Date : 2016-04-12 DOI:10.1080/15659801.2015.1052635
J. Scott Maclvor
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引用次数: 72

Abstract

Vegetated, “green” infrastructure, including terraces, balconies, and vegetated roofs and walls are increasingly common in urban landscapes, elevating habitat into novel contexts above ground. Highly mobile species, like bees and wasps, are often seen foraging on green infrastructure, but whether nesting opportunities are facilitated is not known. Cavity-nesting bees and wasps that provision brood in human-made trap nests were monitored over three years on 29 vegetated and non-vegetated roofs in Toronto, Canada. The study identified 27 species nesting on rooftops but found that building height was negatively correlated with the abundance of brood cells provisioned in trap nests, and positively correlated with the number of unfinished nests. A decline in green space area within a 600 m radius around each rooftop resulted in decreasing species richness and abundance. Although the introduced bee, Megachile rotundata (Fabricius) occupied more sites than any other bee or wasp (27.6%) and was the most abundant ...
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建筑高度很重要:蜜蜂和黄蜂在植被覆盖的屋顶上筑巢活动
植被覆盖的“绿色”基础设施,包括露台、阳台、植被覆盖的屋顶和墙壁,在城市景观中越来越普遍,将栖息地提升到地面上的新环境中。高流动性物种,如蜜蜂和黄蜂,经常在绿色基础设施上觅食,但筑巢机会是否便利尚不清楚。在加拿大多伦多的29个有植被和没有植被的屋顶上,对在人造陷阱巢中产卵的洞巢蜜蜂和黄蜂进行了三年多的监测。研究确定了27种在屋顶筑巢的物种,但发现建筑高度与陷阱巢中提供的育雏细胞的丰度呈负相关,与未完工巢的数量呈正相关。每个屋顶周围600 m半径范围内的绿地面积减少,导致物种丰富度和丰度下降。虽然引进的大黄蜂(Megachile rotundata, Fabricius)占据的位置比其他蜜蜂或黄蜂多(27.6%),而且数量最多。
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来源期刊
Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution
Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution 环境科学-进化生物学
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Israel Journal of Ecology and Evolution includes high-quality original research and review papers that advance our knowledge and understanding of the function, diversity, abundance, distribution, and evolution of organisms. We give equal consideration to all submissions regardless of geography.
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