Nest aggregations of wild bees and apoid wasps in urban pavements: A ‘street life’ to be promoted in urban planning

Author:

Noël Grégoire1ORCID,Van Keymeulen Violette1ORCID,Barbier Yvan2ORCID,Smets Sylvie3,Van Damme Olivier3,Colinet Gilles4ORCID,Lokatis Sophie56ORCID,Ruelle Julien7,Francis Frédéric1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Functional and Evolutionary Entomology Gembloux Agro‐Bio Tech, University of Liège Gembloux Belgium

2. Département du Milieu Naturel et Agricole Service public de Wallonie Gembloux Belgium

3. Belgian Road Research Centre (BRRC) Woluwe‐Saint‐Lambert Belgium

4. Soil‐Water‐Plant Exchanges, Gembloux Agro‐Bio Tech University of Liège Gembloux Belgium

5. Institute of Biology Freie Universität Berlin Berlin Germany

6. Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) Berlin Germany

7. Département Développement Nature et Agriculture Bruxelles Environnement (BE) Bruxelles Belgium

Abstract

Abstract In the last 10 years, the interest in nature‐based solutions and ecosystem services like pollination has increased profoundly and with it the need to gather knowledge about wild bees and apoid wasp community dynamics, especially in urban ecosystems. Research on how the urban environment impacts the conditions of nesting sites is relatively scarce. Recent observations in the Brussels‐Capital Region (BCR; Belgium) show that urban pavements can provide alternative nesting opportunities for ground‐nesting Hymenoptera, such as wild bees and apoid wasps. Here, using a citizen science approach, we investigated the richness of ground‐nesting species living under urban pavements, as well as their preferences for sidewalk characteristics. A total of 22 species belonging to 10 families of wild bees, digger wasps and their associated cleptoparasites were identified at 89 sites in the BCR (Belgium). Sandstone setts or concrete slabs, with an unbound joint size of around 10 mm, were found to be the best suitable urban pavements for the ground‐nesting species. The soil texture under the pavement contained mainly sandy particles. We propose management guidelines to support bee and wasp species nesting under urban pavement in highly urbanised areas. Our observations pave the way for further research in the field of urban ecology and highlight the potential of multifunctional pavement designs that promote not only climate adaptation but also biodiversity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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