Body-size-dependent effects of landscape-level resource energetics on pollinator abundance in woodland remnants

Author:

Pille Arnold Juliana12ORCID,Tylianakis Jason M.3ORCID,Murphy Mark V.1ORCID,Cawthray Gregory R.1ORCID,Webber Bruce L.12ORCID,Didham Raphael K.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, 6009, Australia

2. CSIRO Health & Biosecurity, Centre for Environment and Life Sciences, Floreat, Western Australia, 6014, Australia

3. Bioprotection Aotearoa, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

Abstract

Land use change alters floral resource availability, thereby contributing to declines in important pollinators. However, the severity of land use impact varies by species, influenced by factors such as dispersal ability and resource specialization, both of which can correlate with body size. Here. we test whether floral resource availability in the surrounding landscape (the ‘matrix’) influences bee species’ abundance in isolated remnant woodlands, and whether this effect varies with body size. We sampled quantitative flower-visitation networks within woodland remnants and quantified floral energy resources (nectar and pollen calories) available to each bee species both within the woodland and the matrix. Bee abundance in woodland increased with floral energy resources in the surrounding matrix, with strongest effects on larger-bodied species. Our findings suggest important but size-dependent effects of declining matrix floral resources on the persistence of bees in remnant woodlands, highlighting the need to incorporate landscape-level floral resources in conservation planning for pollinators in threatened natural habitats.

Funder

University of Western Australia—School of Biological Sciences

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation—CSIRO

Australian Government—Department of Education

Bioprotection Aotearoa Centre of Research Excellence to JMT

ARC Linkage Project

Publisher

The Royal Society

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