Honey bees as bioindicators of changing global agricultural landscapes
Tyler P, Quigley, Gro V Amdam and Gyan H Harwood
https://bit.ly/2m6VyEe
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Tyler P, Quigley, Gro V Amdam and Gyan H Harwood
Agricultural landscapes are under pressure from climate change, needs for increased productivity, and changing consumer demand.
Land management decisions will affect ecologically important organisms that live on agricultural land and in surrounding areas.
Honey
bees can be useful bioindicators to detect and track changes in
agricultural landscape quality at spatial and temporal scales.
There is a growing need to understand relationships between agricultural
intensification and global change. Monitoring solutions, however, often
do not include pollinator communities that are of importance to
ecosystem integrity. Here, we put forth the honey bee as an economical
and broadly available bioindicator that can be used to assess and track
changes in the quality of agricultural ecosystems. We detail a variety
of simple, low-cost procedures that can be deployed within honey bee
hives to gain generalizable information about ecosystem quality at
multiple scales, and discuss the potential of the honey bee system in
both environmental and ecological bioindication.
https://bit.ly/2m6VyEe
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