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Dryad

Early resources lead to persistent benefits for bumble bee colony dynamics

Cite this dataset

Williams, Neal M; Malfi, Rosemary; Rundlof, Maj; Crone, Elizabeth (2021). Early resources lead to persistent benefits for bumble bee colony dynamics [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.25338/B8QP8X

Abstract

Conditions experienced early in development can affect the future performance of individuals and populations. Demographic theories predict persistent population impacts of past resources, but few studies have experimentally tested such carry-over effects across generations or cohorts. We used bumble bees to test whether resource timing had persistent effects on within-colony dynamics over sequential cohorts of workers. We simulated a resource pulse for field colonies either early or late in their development and estimated colony growth rates during pulse- and non-pulse periods. During periods when resources were not supplemented, early-pulse colonies grew faster than late-pulse colonies; early-pulse colonies grew larger as a result. These results reveal persistent effects of past resources on current growth and support the importance of transient dynamics in natural ecological systems. Early-pulse colonies also produced more queen offspring, highlighting the critical nature of resource timing for the population, as well as colony, dynamics of a key pollinator.  

Usage notes

The complete data file contains raw data for all analyses on Malfi et al. 2021, Ecology.

Funding

National Science Foundation, Award: DEB1354022

National Science Foundation, Award: DEB1354022

Swedish Research Council for Environment Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning, Award: 330-2014-6439