Can habitat characteristics of a West African forest‐savanna mosaic landscape model bee community composition?

Author:

Soro Nicodénin Angèle1ORCID,Koné N’Golo Abdoulaye2,Silué Dolourou3,Yéo Kolo3,Dekoninck Wouter4

Affiliation:

1. Nangui Abrogoua University, UFR Sciences de la Nature (UFR SN), Research Station in Ecology of Lamto Scientific Reserve N'Douci Côte d'Ivoire

2. Nangui Abrogoua University, UFR Sciences de la Nature (UFR SN), Research Station in Ecology of the Comoé National Park Abidjan Côte d'Ivoire

3. Nangui Abrogoua University, Research Station in Ecology of Lamto scientific Reserve N'Douci Côte d'Ivoire

4. Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, O.D. Taxonomy & Phylogeny Brussels Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBees are vital to both ecosystems and humans worldwide; supplying a range of key support facilities for the successful breeding of the majority of flowering plants. The aim of this study was to assess the bee species composition in a Sudano‐Guinean savanna zone and determining the impact of a set of environmental parameters influencing this species composition in four habitat types. Sampling was carried using yellow pan traps protocol. A total of 846 bees belonging to 3 families, 25 genera and 52 species were collected. The largest number of bee individuals was found in the Apidae family. The most abundant species was Hypotrigona sp. The highest bee species and number of individuals was recorded in the shrubby savanna. Bee species diversity and abundance were found closely correlated with the plant diversity. Gaining a better understanding of the factors influencing bee community dynamics in the given landscape can provide valuable information for conservation efforts, habitat management and help identifying species which ones could be domesticated.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference52 articles.

1. A comunidade de Apoidea (Hymenoptera) da Reserva Passa Dois (Lapa, Paraná, Brasil): 1. Diversidade, abundância relativa e atividade sazonal

2. Sampling bees (Hymenoptera: Apiformes) for pollinator community studies: Pitfalls of pan‐trapping;Cane J. H.;Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society,2000

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