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Biological corridors as important habitat structures for maintaining bees in a tropical fragmented landscape

机译:生物走廊作为一种在热带碎片景观中维持蜜蜂的重要栖息地结构

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Biological corridors are an important conservation strategy to increase connectivity between populations-mainly vertebrates-in fragmented landscapes, which often require habitat restoration to achieve physical connections. Non-target groups such as bees could benefit from corridors while contributing to the restoration process given their role as pollinators, but little is known about the use of corridors by bees. Here we assessed the habitat value for bees of four biological corridors in the Colombian Andes by comparing bee species richness, community composition and functional diversity between corridors (which had two land-cover sections: riparian forest and restored forest), forest patches being connected by corridors and surrounding pastures. We found a higher species richness in riparian than in restored sections of corridors, which was comparable to that in forest and higher than in pasture. Community composition in forest and riparian sections were similar and differed from that in pasture. In contrast, functional diversity was similar among all land-use types, suggesting a higher species redundancy in forest and riparian corridors, given the higher species richness, compared to pastures. Our results show that riparian corridors are holding forest-associated species that could not survive in pastures, and given the higher redundancy, can significantly contribute to the maintenance of pollination services in fragmented landscapes. Our results also indicate that 13 years of restoration process have not been sufficient to reach reference levels (i.e. forest/riparian) in terms of bee species richness, but the recovery of some forest-associated species points to the potential of biological corridors to functionally connect forest patches.
机译:生物走廊是一种重要的保护策略,以增加人口 - 主要是脊椎动物的碎片景观,这通常需要栖息地恢复来实现物理连接。蜜蜂等非目标群体可以从走廊中受益,同时赋予恢复过程,因为它们作为粉丝器的角色,但对使用蜜蜂的使用很少。在这里,我们通过比较蜜蜂种类丰富,社区成分和功能多样性(有两个陆地覆盖部分:河岸森林和恢复的森林),在哥伦比亚和河流森林和恢复的森林中的功能多样性中评估了哥伦比亚人的四个生物走廊的栖息地价值走廊和周围的牧场。我们在河岸中发现了较高的物种丰富性,而不是在走廊恢复的部分中,与森林和高于牧场的恢复部分。森林和河岸部分的社区构成与牧场相似,与牧场不同。相比之下,鉴于牧场的物种较高,造成森林和河岸走廊中的旧物种冗余,呈现出更高的物种冗余。我们的研究结果表明,河岸走廊持有森林相关物种,无法在牧场中存活,并且鉴于更高的冗余,可以显着促进散装景观中的授粉服务。我们的结果还表明,在蜜蜂物种丰富的方面,13年的恢复过程达到参考水平(即森林/河岸),但一些森林相关物种的恢复指向生物走廊的潜力,以便在功能上连接森林补丁。

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