Richness, composition and trophic niche of stingless bee assemblages in urban forest remnants.
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2012
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Resumo
Few studies directly address the consequences of habitat fragmentation for pollinating
insect communities, particularly for the neotropical key pollinator group of stingless
bees. Most studies on bees have defined habitat fragments as remnant patches of floral hosts
or forests, overlooking the nesting needs of bees. Their conclusion is that habitat fragmentation
is broadly deleterious; however, there are contrasting results in the literature.
Insightful studies on habitat fragmentation and bees should consider fragmentation, alteration
and loss of nesting habitats—not just patches of forage plants –, as well as the
permeability of the surrounding matrix to interpatch movement. Here we investigated the
effects of fragmentation caused by urbanization on stingless bee species’ composition and
richness, as well as the permeability of the surrounding matrix. We collected bees from
flowering plants and recorded phytosociological variables of five forest remnants (ranging
from 64 ha to 900 ha) in southeastern Brazil. Large fragments did not contain more species
per unit area than smaller ones; in fact, we found more species in small fragments, most of
which were generalist bees. The presence of more habitat generalist stingless bee species
was also correlated to the structure of vegetation in these fragments. In conclusion, the
quality of the habitat within a fragment (structure of vegetation) as well as the quality of the
matrix has a direct relation to the bee species composition. This can be seen in the direct
relationship between structural diversity of the environment and age of the fragments. The matrix that holds the most recent fragments, probably due to the sprawl of the city, is more
heterogeneous than the one with the oldest fragments. The most heterogeneous matrices
have a certain balance between the trees, buildings and bare soil or herbaceous vegetation
coverage, making the array less impermeable to bees.
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Stingless bees, Landscape, Conservation, Habitat loss
Citação
ITABAIANA, Y. A. et al. Richness, composition and trophic niche of stingless bee assemblages in urban forest remnants. Urban Ecosystems, v. 16, p. 527-541, 2012. Disponível em: <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11252-012-0281-0>. Acesso em: 20 de jul. 2017.