Published April 22, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Seasonality of floral resources in relation to bee activity in agroecosystems

  • 1. University of Guelph
  • 2. University of Ottawa

Description

The contribution of wild insects to crop pollination is becoming increasingly important as global demand for crops dependent on animal pollination increases. If wild insect populations are to persist in agricultural landscapes, there must be sufficient resources over time and space. The temporal, within‐season component of floral resource availability has rarely been investigated, despite growing recognition of its likely importance for pollinator populations. Here, we examined the visitation rates of common bee genera and the spatiotemporal availability of floral resources in agroecosystems over one season to determine whether local wild bee activity was limited by landscape floral resource abundance, and if so, whether it was limited by the present or past abundance of landscape floral resources. Visitation rates and landscape floral resources were measured in 27 agricultural sites in Ontario and Québec, Canada, across four time periods and three spatial scales. Floral resources were determined based on species‐specific floral volume measurements, which we found to be highly correlated with published measurements of nectar sugar mass and pollen volume. Total floral volume at varying spatial scales predicted visits for commonly observed bee genera. We found Lasioglossum and Halictus visits were highest in landscapes that provided either a stable or increasing amount of floral resources over the season. Andrena visits were highest in landscapes with high floral resources at the start of the season, and Bombus visits appeared to be positively related to greater cumulative seasonal abundance of floral resources. These findings together suggest the importance of early‐season floral resources to bees. Megachile visits were negatively associated with the present abundance of floral resources, perhaps reflecting pollinator movement or dilution. Our research provides insight into how seasonal fluctuations in floral resources affect bee activity and how life history traits of bee genera influence their responses to food availability within agroecosystems.

Notes

Guezen_Forrest_shapefiles_2021 folder: See ReadMe file included.

Bee_visits.csv, Floral_counts.csv, Full_dataset.csv: See ReadMe_for_CSV_files.csv for description of all columns.

Funding provided by: University of Ottawa
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100008572
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Funding provided by: Ontario Graduate Scholarship*
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
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Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.7260 (DOI)