Plant-pollinator interactions in Mediterranean semiarid ecosystems
Data files
Dec 11, 2023 version files 150.84 KB
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README.md
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TableS1.Collected_Bees.xlsx
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TableS2._Matrices_of_interaction.xlsx
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TableS3._Prevalences_per_Unit.xlsx
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TableS4._Variables_collected.xlsx
Abstract
Pollinators are fundamental for plant reproduction in natural and agricultural ecosystems. However, their populations are declining worldwide, threatening the functioning of the ecosystem service they provide. The factors driving this change are manifold, but land use changes and interspecific transmission of pathogens between managed and wild bees are prominent. In this context, most research efforts have focused on specific taxa and rarely at the community level, limiting our ability to fully understand the effects of global change on the functioning of plant-pollinator interactions in ecosystems.
Here, we investigate the impact of human activities (beekeeping and land use intensity) on the spread of an emergent pathogen (Vairimorpha ceranae) in Mediterranean wild bee communities inhabiting landscapes with varying levels of anthropogenic disturbance. Plant-pollinator interactions were sampled in nine one-hectare plots along a gradient of land use (urban structures, croplands and natural vegetation) and beekeeping intensity. We analised the impact of human disturbances on pollination networks and pathogen prevalence and applied a network approach to examine whether total effects of species in networks (i.e. direct plus indirect interactions) explain pathogen spread through bee communities.
We found that V. ceranae prevalence in honey bees is not a good predictor of the pathogen spread through bee communities. There seems to be a temporal mismatch between pathogen dynamics in managed and wild bees. Networks with more diversity of interactions and more plants showed less pathogen prevalence, but total effect analyses (i.e. combining direct and indirect interactions) failed to explain pathogen transmission across pollination networks. Croplands increased wild bee density, and interactions and species diversity in networks while shrublands had the opposite effect. Our results highlight the importance of studying pathogen dynamics at the community level and analysing species interaction patterns to improve our understanding of pathogen spread through communities.
README: Plant-pollinator interactions in Mediterranean semiarid ecosystems
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.5qfttdzcv
Data on the manuscript "Contrasting effects of beekeeping and land use on plant-pollinator networks and pathogen prevalence in Mediterranean semiarid ecosystems" (https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.06979). Data on collected bees and plant-pollinator interactions, matrices of inteteractions between plants and bees in the study plots, prevalence of Vairimorpha ceranae and collected variables (densities of honey bees and wild bees, number of flowering plant species, etc).
Description of the data and file structure
Table S1. It shows the information on the sampled bee individuals, the plants where they were foraging and the sampling date and location
Table S2. It includes the matrices of interactions between bees and plants per study plot. Data derived from Table S1.
Table S3. Prevalence of Vairimorpha ceranae in the collected bees (i.e. number of bees with the pathogen/total bees collected) per sampled plot. Prevalence of V. ceranae in the plants visited by the bees (i.e. dividing the number of visits received by bees positive to the pathogen between the total number of visits, excluding the visits realized by the honey bee).
Table S4. Collected variables: (i) sampling; (ii) unit (i.e. sampled plot); (iii) latitude of the sampled plot; (iv) longitude of the sampled plot; (v) density of honey bees in the plots (bees/m2); (vi) density of wild bees (bees/m2); (vii) Prevalence of Vairimorpha ceranae in honey bees; (viii) Prevalence of V. ceranae in wild bees; (ix) number of bee species; (x) nº of flowers in the plots; (xi) density of flowers (flowers/m2); (xii) number of plant species registered.
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