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Open AccessJournal Article

Distribution and forage use of exotic bumblebees in South Island, New Zealand

Dave Goulson, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2004 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 2, pp 225-232
TLDR
Results provide support for the hypothesis that the loss of flower-rich meadows, particularly those containing populations of Fabaceae species with long corollae, is responsible for the decline of bumblebee species across Europe.
Abstract
The rapid decline in bumblebee populations within Europe has been linked to habitat loss through agricultural intensification, and a consequential reduction in the availability of preferred forage plants. The successful introduction of four European Bombus species to the South Island of New Zealand from England (in 1885 and 1906) provides an opportunity to determine how important different forage plants (also introduced from the U.K.) are to two severely threatened European bumblebee species (Bombus ruderatus and B. subterraneus). In January 2003 we conducted a survey of bumblebee populations across 70 sites in the central and southern South Island, recording which plant species were being used as pollen and nectar sources for each Bombus species. All four bumblebee species showed a clear preference for plants of European origin. Only B. terrestris, the most polylectic species, was recorded feeding on native plant species. The longer-tongued bumblebees, B. hortorum, B. ruderatus, and B. subterraneus, foraged predominantly on just two plant species; Trifolium pratense for both nectar and pollen, and Echium vulgare for nectar. These plant species are now declining in abundance in the U.K. Our results provide support for the hypothesis that the loss of flower-rich meadows, particularly those containing populations of Fabaceae species with long corollae, is responsible for the decline of bumblebee species across Europe. Comparison with earlier bumblebee surveys suggests that long-tongued bumblebees may also be in decline in New Zealand, particularly B. subterraneus which is now very localised and scarce.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative historical change in bumblebee (Bombus spp.) assemblages of red clover fields.

TL;DR: Historical changes in local bumblebee assemblages are expected to severely affect plant reproduction, in particular long-tubed species, which are pollinated by long-tongued bumblebees.
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Plant diversity and composition compensate for negative effects of urbanization on foraging bumble bees

TL;DR: Investigating how habitat isolation through increasing areas of concrete, as well as the diversity, abundance, and community composition of floral resources, determine bumble bee abundance and diversity in cities found plant species diversity and abundance to be more important than the amount of concrete in driving the abundance and species richness of common bumble bees in a German city.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bombus terrestris, pollinator, invasive and pest: An assessment of problems associated with its widespread introductions for commercial purposes

TL;DR: It is recognized that this species is invasive, can island hop to new locations and may disturb local ecosystems, and the possible measures that must be taken to minimize the B. terrestris invasion are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increased bumblebee abundance along the margins of a mass flowering crop: evidence for pollinator spill‐over

TL;DR: There is evidence for pollinator spill-over from the bean MFC to nearby semi-natural habitat, but the effect is comparatively short lived and not specific to any single bumblebee species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct interactions between invasive plants and native pollinators: evidence, impacts and approaches

TL;DR: A better understanding of relevant individual-level traits is recommended to predict direct interactions between invasive plants and native pollinators and to explain community-level impacts.
References
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Book

Ecological Diversity and its Measurement

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define definitions of diversity and apply them to the problem of measuring species diversity, choosing an index and interpreting diversity measures, and applying them to structural and structural diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of diversity

E. H. Simpson
- 01 Jan 1949 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors define and examine a measure of concentration in terms of population constants, and examine the relationship between the characteristic and the index of diversity when both are applied to a logarithmic distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of introduced bees on native ecosystems

TL;DR: Negative impacts of exotic bees need to be carefully assessed before further introductions are carried out.
Book

Bumblebees: their behaviour and ecology.

Dave Goulson
TL;DR: This book discusses social organisation and conflict in bumblebee communities, foraging economics, and the effects of introduced bees on native ecosystems.
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