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Resource assurance predicts specialist and generalist bee activity in drought
Authors:Robert L. Minckley  T'ai H. Roulston  Neal M. Williams
Affiliation:1.Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA;2.Blandy Experimental Farm, University of Virginia, 400 Blandy Farm Lane, Boyce, VA 22620, USA;3.Department of Entomology, University of California-Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Abstract:
Many short-lived desert organisms remain in diapause during drought. Theoretically, the cues desert species use to continue diapause through drought should differ depending on the availability of critical resources, but the unpredictability and infrequent occurrence of climate extremes and reduced insect activity during such events make empirical tests of this prediction difficult. An intensive study of a diverse bee–plant community through a drought event found that bee specialists of a drought-sensitive host plant were absent in the drought year in contrast to generalist bees and to specialist bees of a drought-insensitive host plant. Different responses of bee species to drought indicate that the diapause cues used by bee species allow them to reliably predict host availability. Species composition of the bee community in drought shifted towards mostly generalist species. However, we predict that more frequent and extended drought, predicted by climate change models for southwest North America, will result in bee communities that are species-poor and dominated by specialist species, as found today in the most arid desert region of North America.
Keywords:pollination   diapause   host specialization   climate change   Apiformes
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