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Bee phenology is predicted by climatic variation and functional traits

Creators: Stemkovski, Michael
Year: 2021
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.t76hdr7zc
License: See source for details
Location: Upper East River / Gunnison Basin, Colorado
Temporal extent: 2009-01-01 to 2017-12-31
Bounding box: 38.656°N to 39.027°N, -107.065°W to -106.862°W
Publisher: RMBL
Tags: bee, phenology, climate, plant-pollinator interaction, functional traits, Flowering & Pollination, Insect Ecology, Vertebrate Biology, Hydrology & Watersheds, Snow & Ice, Climate Change Impacts, Data Science & Modeling, Gunnison Basin

Description

Climate change is shifting the environmental cues that determine the phenology of interacting species. Plant-pollinator systems may be susceptible to temporal mismatch if bees and flowering plants differ in their phenological responses to warming temperatures. While the cues that trigger flowering are well-understood, little is known about what determines bee phenology. Using Generalized Additive Models, we analyzed time-series data representing 67 bee species collected over nine years in the Colorado Rocky Mountains to perform the first community-wide quantification of the drivers of bee phenology. Bee emergence was sensitive to climatic variation, advancing with earlier snowmelt timing, while later phenophases were best explained by functional traits including overwintering stage and nest location. Comparison of these findings to a long-term flower study showed that bee phenology is less sensitive than flower phenology to climatic variation, indicating potential for reduced synchrony of flowers and pollinators under climate change.

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