Investigating the role of landscape composition on honey bee colony winter mortality: A long-term analysis

被引:0
|
作者
Sabrina Kuchling
Ian Kopacka
Elfriede Kalcher-Sommersguter
Michael Schwarz
Karl Crailsheim
Robert Brodschneider
机构
[1] Statistics and Integrative Risk Assessment,Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES) GmbH, Data
[2] Institute of Biology,University of Graz
[3] Statistics and Integrative Risk Assessment,Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES) GmbH, Data
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The health of honey bee colonies is, amongst others, affected by the amount, quality and diversity of available melliferous plants. Since landscape is highly diverse throughout Austria regarding the availability of nutritional resources, we used data from annual surveys on honey bee colony losses ranging over six years to analyse a possible relationship with land use. The data set comprises reports from a total of 6,655 beekeepers and 129,428 wintered honey bee colonies. Regions surrounding the beekeeping operations were assigned to one of six clusters according to their composition of land use categories by use of a hierarchical cluster analysis, allowing a rough distinction between urban regions, regions predominated by semi-natural areas and pastures, and mainly agricultural environments. We ran a Generalised Linear Mixed Model and found winter colony mortality significantly affected by operation size, year, and cluster membership, but also by the interaction of year and cluster membership. Honey bee colonies in regions composed predominantly of semi-natural areas, coniferous forests and pastures had the lowest loss probability in four out of six years, and loss probabilities within these regions were significantly lower in five out of six years compared to those within regions composed predominantly of artificial surfaces, broad-leaved and coniferous forest.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Investigating the role of landscape composition on honey bee colony winter mortality: A long-term analysis
    Kuchling, Sabrina
    Kopacka, Ian
    Kalcher-Sommersguter, Elfriede
    Schwarz, Michael
    Crailsheim, Karl
    Brodschneider, Robert
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [2] Multivariate Landscape Analysis of Honey Bee Winter Mortality in Wallonia, Belgium
    Van Esch, Leen
    De Kok, Jean-Luc
    Janssen, Liliane
    Buelens, Bart
    De Smet, Lina
    de Graaf, Dirk C.
    Engelen, Guy
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MODELING & ASSESSMENT, 2020, 25 (03) : 441 - 452
  • [3] Multivariate Landscape Analysis of Honey Bee Winter Mortality in Wallonia, Belgium
    Leen Van Esch
    Jean-Luc De Kok
    Liliane Janssen
    Bart Buelens
    Lina De Smet
    Dirk C. de Graaf
    Guy Engelen
    [J]. Environmental Modeling & Assessment, 2020, 25 : 441 - 452
  • [4] ECOBEE: a tool for long-term honey bee colony monitoring at the landscape scale in West European intensive agroecosystems
    Odoux, Jean-Francois
    Aupinel, Pierrick
    Gateff, Sophie
    Requier, Fabrice
    Henry, Mickael
    Bretagnolle, Vincent
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APICULTURAL RESEARCH, 2014, 53 (01) : 57 - 66
  • [5] Honey Bee Colony Mortality in the Pacific Northwest: Winter 2008/2009
    Caron, Dewey
    Burgett, Michael
    Rucker, Randal
    Thurman, Walter
    [J]. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, 2010, 150 (03): : 265 - 269
  • [6] Honey Bee Colony Mortality in the Pacific Northwest: Winter 2009/2010
    Caron, Dewey
    Sagili, Ramesh
    [J]. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, 2011, 151 (01): : 73 - 76
  • [7] A biophysical approach to assess weather impacts on honey bee colony winter mortality
    Becsi, Benedikt
    Formayer, Herbert
    Brodschneider, Robert
    [J]. ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 2021, 8 (09):
  • [8] Honey Bee Colony Mortality in the Pacific Northwest (USA) Winter 2007/2008
    Burgett, Michael
    Rucker, Randal
    Thurman, Walter
    [J]. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, 2009, 149 (06): : 573 - 575
  • [9] Modelling long-term effects of IGRs on honey bee colonies
    Thompson, Helen M.
    Wilkins, Selwyn
    Battersby, Alastair H.
    Waite, Ruth J.
    Wilkinson, David
    [J]. PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2007, 63 (11) : 1081 - 1084
  • [10] Thiamethoxam: Long-term effects following honey bee colony-level exposure and implications for risk assessment
    Thompson, Helen
    Overmyer, Jay
    Feken, Max
    Ruddle, Natalie
    Vaughan, Sarah
    Scorgie, Emily
    Bocksch, Sigrun
    Hill, Marcus
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 654 : 60 - 71