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Journal ArticleDOI

Displacement of Japanese native bumblebees by the recently introduced Bombus terrestris (L.) (Hymenoptera: Apidae)

TLDR
It is suggested that competition for nest sites rather than flower resources is the major ecological mechanism for displacement of native bees, which may cause local extinction of native bumblebees.
Abstract
The introduced Bombus terrestris has recently been naturalized in Japan and become dominant in some local communities. We investigated potential niche overlaps between introduced and native bumblebees in terms of morphological characteristics, seasonal flight activity, foraging and nesting habitat use, and plant species visited. There were considerable niche overlaps in flower resource use between B. terrestris and B. hypocrita sapporoensis/B. pseudobaicalensis. Bombus terrestris also potentially competes for nest sites with B. hypocrita sapporoensis. During 3-year monitoring, B. pseudobaicalensis showed no noticeable change, but B. hypocrita sapporoensis decreased while B. terrestris increased. Abundant flower resources provided by exotic plants may buffer native bumblebees from competition for food with introduced species. By contrast, the number of nest usurpers found in B. terrestris nests increased between 2003 and 2005, indicating that availability of nest sites was limiting and queens strongly competed for nest sites. Our findings suggest that competition for nest sites rather than flower resources is the major ecological mechanism for displacement of native bees. The large reduction of B. hypocrita sapporoensis queen indicates that B. terrestris may cause local extinction of native bumblebees. Control of established B. terrestris populations and prevention of further range expansion are urgently needed.

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Bee declines driven by combined stress from parasites, pesticides, and lack of flowers

TL;DR: The stresses bees are experiencing from climate change, infectious diseases, and insecticides are reviewed, with concern that the authors may be nearing a “pollination crisis” in which crop yields begin to fall.
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Bumblebee vulnerability and conservation world-wide

TL;DR: There is evidence that some bumblebee species are declining in Europe, North America, and Asia and it is recommended that live bumblebees should not be moved across continents or oceans for commercial pollination until proven safe.
Journal ArticleDOI

The conservation and restoration of wild bees

TL;DR: More research is greatly needed in many areas of bee conservation, including basic population biology, bee restoration in nonagricultural contexts, and the identification of disturbance‐sensitive bee species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Citizen science: a new approach to advance ecology, education, and conservation

TL;DR: Amano et al. as discussed by the authors presented a report on the 61th annual meeting of the Ecological Society of Japan (ESJ), which was supported by the European Commission's Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship Programme (PIIF-GA-2011- 303221).
Journal ArticleDOI

Climatic Risk and Distribution Atlas of European Bumblebees

TL;DR: In this paper, maps depicting potential risks of climate change for bumble bees are shown together with informative summary statistics, ecological background information and a picture of each European species, thanks to the EU FP7 project STEP, the authors gathered over one million bumblebee records from all over Europe.
References
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Biotic invasions: causes, epidemiology, global consequences, and control

TL;DR: Given their current scale, biotic invasions have taken their place alongside human-driven atmospheric and oceanic alterations as major agents of global change and left unchecked, they will influence these other forces in profound but still unpredictable ways.
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Resource Partitioning in Ecological Communities

TL;DR: To conclude with a list of questions appropriate for studies of resource partitioning, questions this article has related to the theory in a preliminary way.
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A technique for analysis of utilization-availability data

TL;DR: A chi-square test of the hypothesis that animals use habi- tat or forage species in proportion to their availability to the animal, a multinomial distribution is presented, using moose distribution patterns in an area including the Little Sioux Burn of northeastern Minnesota as an example.
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Measurement of "overlap" in comparative ecological studies

TL;DR: Objective, empirical measures of overlap between samples of items distributed proportionally into various qualitative categories derived from either probability or information theory should prove useful to the ecologist in comparative studies of diet, habitat preference, seasonal patterns of abundance, faunal lists, or similar data.
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A century of advances in bumblebee domestication and the economic and environmental aspects of its commercialization for pollination

TL;DR: L'acceptation rapide des bourdons et leur vaste introduction en tant que pollinisateurs peut s'expliquer par les avantages economiques par rapport aux techniques plus anciennes, souvent artificielles are presente l'evolution dans l'expansion mondiale.
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