Biology (Feb 2023)

Changes in Community Composition and Functional Traits of Bumblebees in an Alpine Ecosystem Relate to Climate Warming

  • Victor Sebastian Scharnhorst,
  • Katharina Thierolf,
  • Johann Neumayer,
  • Benedikt Becsi,
  • Herbert Formayer,
  • Julia Lanner,
  • Esther Ockermüller,
  • Alina Mirwald,
  • Barbara König,
  • Monika Kriechbaum,
  • Harald Meimberg,
  • Philipp Meyer,
  • Christina Rupprecht,
  • Bärbel Pachinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12020316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 316

Abstract

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Climate warming has been observed as the main cause of changes in diversity, community composition, and spatial distribution of different plant and invertebrate species. Due to even stronger warming compared to the global mean, bumblebees in alpine ecosystems are particularly exposed to these changes. To investigate the effects of climate warming, we sampled bumblebees along an elevational gradient, compared the records with data from 1935 and 1936, and related our results to climate models. We found that bumblebee community composition differed significantly between sampling periods and that increasing temperatures in spring were the most plausible factor explaining these range shifts. In addition, species diversity estimates were significantly lower compared to historical records. The number of socio-parasitic species was significantly higher in the historical communities, while recent communities showed increases in climate generalists and forest species at lower elevations. Nevertheless, no significant changes in community-weighted means of a species temperature index (STI) or the number of cold-adapted species were detected, likely due to the historical data resolution. We conclude that the composition and functionality of bumblebee communities in the study area have been significantly affected by climate warming, with changes in land use and vegetation cover likely playing an additional important role.

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