The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success

Pollinators are the basis of ecosystem services across all land-use types. Current global trends reveal that pollinators and their services are declining due to a variety of anthropogenic threats, including habitat fragmentation, pesticide use, climate change, and parasites and pathogens from commer...

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Main Author: Lamb, Ieuan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/68724/
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author Lamb, Ieuan
author_facet Lamb, Ieuan
author_sort Lamb, Ieuan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Pollinators are the basis of ecosystem services across all land-use types. Current global trends reveal that pollinators and their services are declining due to a variety of anthropogenic threats, including habitat fragmentation, pesticide use, climate change, and parasites and pathogens from commercially reared bees. Wild pollinator declines will increase global food security risks, especially the supply of vital dietary vitamins and micronutrients. Urban areas have been found to provide more improved habitat quality than some rural landscapes and provide refuge from the combination of lethal threats that occur within modern agricultural landscapes. We experimentally tested accessible food resource provision for solitary bees found within landscapes across an urban gradient, by introducing standardised tube nests seeded with Osmia bicornis pupae and measuring the reproductive output of the adults that emerged from those pupae. In addition, pollinator group richness and abundance were surveyed at every nest site. The urban gradient encompassed highly urbanised landscapes, suburban landscapes with increasing green cover, grasslands, and woodlands. Osmia bicornis reproduction was lowest in highly urban sites and highest in natural landscapes. In suburban landscapes reproductive output was lower than natural landscapes but still at sufficient levels to support stable populations. Greenspace within suburban landscapes had a negative impact on reproductive output suggesting habitat quality was higher within residential gardens than suburban parks. Hoverflies and solitary bee populations were associated negatively with urbanisation but bumblebees, Lepidoptera and honey bees were unaffected. This is proposed to be due to differences in mobility and provision of nesting and larval habitats within urban areas.
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spelling nottingham-687242023-01-01T04:30:21Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/68724/ The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success Lamb, Ieuan Pollinators are the basis of ecosystem services across all land-use types. Current global trends reveal that pollinators and their services are declining due to a variety of anthropogenic threats, including habitat fragmentation, pesticide use, climate change, and parasites and pathogens from commercially reared bees. Wild pollinator declines will increase global food security risks, especially the supply of vital dietary vitamins and micronutrients. Urban areas have been found to provide more improved habitat quality than some rural landscapes and provide refuge from the combination of lethal threats that occur within modern agricultural landscapes. We experimentally tested accessible food resource provision for solitary bees found within landscapes across an urban gradient, by introducing standardised tube nests seeded with Osmia bicornis pupae and measuring the reproductive output of the adults that emerged from those pupae. In addition, pollinator group richness and abundance were surveyed at every nest site. The urban gradient encompassed highly urbanised landscapes, suburban landscapes with increasing green cover, grasslands, and woodlands. Osmia bicornis reproduction was lowest in highly urban sites and highest in natural landscapes. In suburban landscapes reproductive output was lower than natural landscapes but still at sufficient levels to support stable populations. Greenspace within suburban landscapes had a negative impact on reproductive output suggesting habitat quality was higher within residential gardens than suburban parks. Hoverflies and solitary bee populations were associated negatively with urbanisation but bumblebees, Lepidoptera and honey bees were unaffected. This is proposed to be due to differences in mobility and provision of nesting and larval habitats within urban areas. 2022-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/68724/1/%28Revisions-clean%29The%20Effect%20of%20Urbanisation%20on%20Pollinator%20Abundance%20and%20Reproductive%20Success%20%20%20%20Ieuan%20Lamb%20%20.pdf Lamb, Ieuan (2022) The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Pollinators Urbanisation Landscape change Solitary bee reproduction
spellingShingle Pollinators
Urbanisation
Landscape change
Solitary bee reproduction
Lamb, Ieuan
The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title_full The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title_fullStr The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title_full_unstemmed The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title_short The effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
title_sort effect of urbanisation on pollinator abundance and reproductive success
topic Pollinators
Urbanisation
Landscape change
Solitary bee reproduction
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/68724/