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26 February 2016 Bee Abundance and Nutritional Status in Relation to Grassland Management Practices in an Agricultural Landscape
Griffin W. Smith, Diane M. Debinski, Nicole A. Scavo, Corey J. Lange, John T. Delaney, Raymond A. Moranz, James R. Miller, David M. Engle, Amy L. Toth
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Abstract

Grasslands provide important resources for pollinators in agricultural landscapes. Managing grasslands with fire and grazing has the potential to benefit plant and pollinator communities, though there is uncertainty about the ideal approach. We examined the relationships among burning and grazing regimes, plant communities, and Bombus species and Apis mellifera L. abundance and nutritional indicators at the Grand River Grasslands in southern Iowa and northern Missouri. Treatment regimes included burn-only, grazed-and-burned, and patch-burn graze (pastures subdivided into three temporally distinct fire patches with free access by cattle). The premise of the experimental design was that patch-burn grazing would increase habitat heterogeneity, thereby providing more diverse and abundant floral resources for pollinators. We predicted that both bee abundance and individual bee nutritional indicators (bee size and lipid content) would be positively correlated with floral resource abundance. There were no significant differences among treatments with respect to bee abundance. However, some of the specific characteristics of the plant community showed significant relationships with bee response variables. Pastures with greater abundance of floral resources had greater bee abundance but lower bee nutritional indicators. Bee nutritional variables were positively correlated with vegetation height, but, in some cases, negatively correlated with stocking rate. These results suggest grassland site characteristics such as floral resource abundance and stocking rate are of potential importance to bee pollinators and suggest avenues for further research to untangle the complex interactions between grassland management, plant responses, and bee health.

© The Authors 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com
Griffin W. Smith, Diane M. Debinski, Nicole A. Scavo, Corey J. Lange, John T. Delaney, Raymond A. Moranz, James R. Miller, David M. Engle, and Amy L. Toth "Bee Abundance and Nutritional Status in Relation to Grassland Management Practices in an Agricultural Landscape," Environmental Entomology 45(2), 338-347, (26 February 2016). https://doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvw005
Received: 26 August 2015; Accepted: 19 January 2016; Published: 26 February 2016
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KEYWORDS
bumble bee
grassland management
honey bee
patch-burn grazing
pollinator nutrition
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