Scientific Reports (Nov 2022)

A large-scale dataset reveals taxonomic and functional specificities of wild bee communities in urban habitats of Western Europe

  • Arthur Fauviau,
  • Mathilde Baude,
  • Nicolas Bazin,
  • William Fiordaliso,
  • Alessandro Fisogni,
  • Laura Fortel,
  • Joseph Garrigue,
  • Benoît Geslin,
  • Jérémie Goulnik,
  • Laurent Guilbaud,
  • Nina Hautekèete,
  • Charlène Heiniger,
  • Michael Kuhlmann,
  • Olivier Lambert,
  • Dominique Langlois,
  • Violette Le Féon,
  • Carlos Lopez Vaamonde,
  • Grégory Maillet,
  • François Massol,
  • Nadia Michel,
  • Alice Michelot-Antalik,
  • Denis Michez,
  • Hugues Mouret,
  • Yves Piquot,
  • Simon G. Potts,
  • Stuart Roberts,
  • Lise Ropars,
  • Lucie Schurr,
  • Colin Van Reeth,
  • Irène Villalta,
  • Vincent Zaninotto,
  • Isabelle Dajoz,
  • Mickaël Henry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-21512-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Wild bees are declining, mainly due to the expansion of urban habitats that have led to land-use changes. Effects of urbanization on wild bee communities are still unclear, as shown by contrasting reports on their species and functional diversities in urban habitats. To address this current controversy, we built a large dataset, merging 16 surveys carried out in 3 countries of Western Europe during the past decades, and tested whether urbanization influences local wild bee taxonomic and functional community composition. These surveys encompassed a range of urbanization levels, that were quantified using two complementary metrics: the proportion of impervious surfaces and the human population density. Urban expansion, when measured as a proportion of impervious surfaces, but not as human population density, was significantly and negatively correlated with wild bee community species richness. Taxonomic dissimilarity of the bee community was independent of both urbanization metrics. However, occurrence rates of functional traits revealed significant differences between lightly and highly urbanized communities, for both urbanization metrics. With higher human population density, probabilities of occurrence of above-ground nesters, generalist and small species increased. With higher soil sealing, probabilities of occurrence of above-ground nesters, generalists and social bees increased as well. Overall, these results, based on a large European dataset, suggest that urbanization can have negative impacts on wild bee diversity. They further identify some traits favored in urban environments, showing that several wild bee species can thrive in cities.