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Seasonality of pollinators in Mediterranean montane habitats: cool-blooded bees for early-blooming plants

View ORCID ProfileCarlos M. Herrera, View ORCID ProfileAlejandro Núñez, View ORCID ProfileLuis O. Aguado, View ORCID ProfileConchita Alonso
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.07.506992
Carlos M. Herrera
1Estación Biológica de Doñana, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Avda. Américo Vespucio 26, E-41092 Sevilla, Spain
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  • For correspondence: herrera@ebd.csic.es
Alejandro Núñez
1Estación Biológica de Doñana, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Avda. Américo Vespucio 26, E-41092 Sevilla, Spain
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Luis O. Aguado
2Andrena Iniciativas y Estudios Medioambientales, Calle Nueva del Saliente 1 Bis, E-47328 La Parrilla (Valladolid), Spain
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Conchita Alonso
1Estación Biológica de Doñana, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Avda. Américo Vespucio 26, E-41092 Sevilla, Spain
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Abstract

Understanding the factors that drive community-wide assembly of plant-pollinator systems along environmental gradients has considerable evolutionary, ecological and applied significance. Variation in thermal environments combined with intrinsic differences among pollinators in thermal biology (tolerance limits, thermal optima, thermoregulatory ability) have been proposed as drivers of community-wide pollinator gradients, but this suggestion remains largely speculative. We test the hypothesis that seasonality in bee pollinator composition in montane habitats of southeastern Spain, which largely reflects the prevalence during the early flowering season of mining bees (Andrena), is a consequence of the latter’s thermal biology. Quantitative information on seasonality of Andrena bees in the whole plant community (275 plant species) was combined with field and laboratory data on key aspects of the thermal biology of 30 species of Andrena (endothermic ability, warming constant, relationships of body temperature with ambient and operative temperatures). Andrena bees were a conspicuous, albeit strongly seasonal component of the pollinator assemblage of the regional plant community, visiting flowers of 153 different plant species (57% of total). Proportion of Andrena relative to all bees reached a maximum among plant species which flowered in late winter and early spring, and declined precipitously from May onwards. Andrena were recorded only during the cooler segment of the annual range of air temperatures experienced at flowers by the whole bee assemblage. These patterns can be explained by features of Andrena’s thermal biology: null or negligible endothermy; ability to forage at much lower body temperature than endothermic bees (difference ~10°C); low upper tolerable limit of body temperature, beyond which thermal stress presumably precluded foraging at the warmest period of year; weak thermoregulatory capacity; and high warming constant enhancing ectothermic warming. Our results demonstrate the importance of lineage-specific pollinator traits as drivers of seasonality in community-wide pollinator composition; show that exploitation of cooler microclimates by bees does not require endothermy; falsify the frequent assumption that endothermy and thermoregulation apply to all bees; and suggest that medium- and large-sized ectothermic bees with low upper thermal limits and weak thermoregulatory ability can actually be more adversely affected by climate warming than large endothermic species.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Footnotes

  • Open research statement: All raw data and metadata used in this study will be deposited upon acceptance at the public institutional repository of Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (Digital.CSIC)

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted September 09, 2022.
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Seasonality of pollinators in Mediterranean montane habitats: cool-blooded bees for early-blooming plants
Carlos M. Herrera, Alejandro Núñez, Luis O. Aguado, Conchita Alonso
bioRxiv 2022.09.07.506992; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.07.506992
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Seasonality of pollinators in Mediterranean montane habitats: cool-blooded bees for early-blooming plants
Carlos M. Herrera, Alejandro Núñez, Luis O. Aguado, Conchita Alonso
bioRxiv 2022.09.07.506992; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.07.506992

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