Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions

Ecología Austral, 24:42-50 (2014)Volcanic eruptions are large-scale natural disturbances, which can negatively affect insect fauna and the ecological interactions in which they are involved. The 2011 eruption of the volcanic complex Puyehue Cordón-Caulle (PCC) produced the deposition of 950 million tons of ash on Argentine Patagonia, creating an ash layer of varying thickness. Although experimental studies confirmed that PCC volcanic ash negatively affects survival and behavior in many insect taxa, including bees, the effects of ash deposition on the plant-pollinator interactions (PPI) of this group of insects in natural landscapes remained untested. We evaluated the effect of the gradient of increasing ash layer thickness (0-15cm) on: (1) number of wild bees visiting flowers and total bee richness in 16 raspberry fields after the eruption, (2) number of native (Bombus dahlbomii) and invasive (B. terrestris and B. ruderatus) bumble bees foraging on wild flowers in 10 sites before and after the eruption, and (3) the proportion of "triggered" flowers (i.e. papilionaceous flowers visited for first time by large bees) in 32 populations of the invasive shrub scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), before and after the eruption. With the increase of ash deposition, we found a consistent and significant decrease in (1) the number of wild bees and total bee richness visiting raspberry flowers; (2) the number of bumble bees, particularly B. terrestris, visiting wild flowers; and (3) the proportion of triggered flowers of scotch broom. Thus, volcanic eruptions can exert a detrimental effect on bee fauna and concomitant PPI, with a potential cascade effect on the pollination service to crops, the spread of invasive bumble bees, and the pollination success of invasive plants. 

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Main Authors: Morales, Carolina, Saez, Adriana, Arbetman, Marina P., Cavallero, Laura, Aizen, Marcelo A.
Format: Digital revista
Language:eng
Published: Asociación Argentina de Ecología 2014
Online Access:https://ojs.ecologiaaustral.com.ar/index.php/Ecologia_Austral/article/view/36
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institution AUSTRAL
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country Argentina
countrycode AR
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databasecode rev-ecoaus
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region America del Sur
libraryname Asociación Argentina de Ecología
language eng
format Digital
author Morales, Carolina
Saez, Adriana
Arbetman, Marina P.
Cavallero, Laura
Aizen, Marcelo A.
spellingShingle Morales, Carolina
Saez, Adriana
Arbetman, Marina P.
Cavallero, Laura
Aizen, Marcelo A.
Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
author_facet Morales, Carolina
Saez, Adriana
Arbetman, Marina P.
Cavallero, Laura
Aizen, Marcelo A.
author_sort Morales, Carolina
title Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
title_short Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
title_full Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
title_fullStr Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
title_full_unstemmed Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
title_sort detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions
description Ecología Austral, 24:42-50 (2014)Volcanic eruptions are large-scale natural disturbances, which can negatively affect insect fauna and the ecological interactions in which they are involved. The 2011 eruption of the volcanic complex Puyehue Cordón-Caulle (PCC) produced the deposition of 950 million tons of ash on Argentine Patagonia, creating an ash layer of varying thickness. Although experimental studies confirmed that PCC volcanic ash negatively affects survival and behavior in many insect taxa, including bees, the effects of ash deposition on the plant-pollinator interactions (PPI) of this group of insects in natural landscapes remained untested. We evaluated the effect of the gradient of increasing ash layer thickness (0-15cm) on: (1) number of wild bees visiting flowers and total bee richness in 16 raspberry fields after the eruption, (2) number of native (Bombus dahlbomii) and invasive (B. terrestris and B. ruderatus) bumble bees foraging on wild flowers in 10 sites before and after the eruption, and (3) the proportion of "triggered" flowers (i.e. papilionaceous flowers visited for first time by large bees) in 32 populations of the invasive shrub scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), before and after the eruption. With the increase of ash deposition, we found a consistent and significant decrease in (1) the number of wild bees and total bee richness visiting raspberry flowers; (2) the number of bumble bees, particularly B. terrestris, visiting wild flowers; and (3) the proportion of triggered flowers of scotch broom. Thus, volcanic eruptions can exert a detrimental effect on bee fauna and concomitant PPI, with a potential cascade effect on the pollination service to crops, the spread of invasive bumble bees, and the pollination success of invasive plants. 
publisher Asociación Argentina de Ecología
publishDate 2014
url https://ojs.ecologiaaustral.com.ar/index.php/Ecologia_Austral/article/view/36
work_keys_str_mv AT moralescarolina detrimentaleffectsofvolcanicashdepositiononbeefaunaandplantpollinatorinteractions
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spelling rev-ecoaus-article-362023-11-02T19:27:37Z Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions Detrimental effects of volcanic ash deposition on bee fauna and plant-pollinator interactions Morales, Carolina Saez, Adriana Arbetman, Marina P. Cavallero, Laura Aizen, Marcelo A. Ecología Austral, 24:42-50 (2014)Volcanic eruptions are large-scale natural disturbances, which can negatively affect insect fauna and the ecological interactions in which they are involved. The 2011 eruption of the volcanic complex Puyehue Cordón-Caulle (PCC) produced the deposition of 950 million tons of ash on Argentine Patagonia, creating an ash layer of varying thickness. Although experimental studies confirmed that PCC volcanic ash negatively affects survival and behavior in many insect taxa, including bees, the effects of ash deposition on the plant-pollinator interactions (PPI) of this group of insects in natural landscapes remained untested. We evaluated the effect of the gradient of increasing ash layer thickness (0-15cm) on: (1) number of wild bees visiting flowers and total bee richness in 16 raspberry fields after the eruption, (2) number of native (Bombus dahlbomii) and invasive (B. terrestris and B. ruderatus) bumble bees foraging on wild flowers in 10 sites before and after the eruption, and (3) the proportion of "triggered" flowers (i.e. papilionaceous flowers visited for first time by large bees) in 32 populations of the invasive shrub scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), before and after the eruption. With the increase of ash deposition, we found a consistent and significant decrease in (1) the number of wild bees and total bee richness visiting raspberry flowers; (2) the number of bumble bees, particularly B. terrestris, visiting wild flowers; and (3) the proportion of triggered flowers of scotch broom. Thus, volcanic eruptions can exert a detrimental effect on bee fauna and concomitant PPI, with a potential cascade effect on the pollination service to crops, the spread of invasive bumble bees, and the pollination success of invasive plants.  Ecología Austral, 24:42-50 (2014)Las erupciones volcánicas son perturbaciones naturales a gran escala, que pueden afectar negativamente a la fauna de insectos y las interacciones ecológicas en las que están involucrados. La erupción del complejo volcánico Puyehue Cordón-Caulle (PCC) en el 2011 depositó 950 millones de toneladas de cenizas en la Patagonia Argentina, creando una capa de cenizas de espesor variable. Si bien los estudios experimentales confirmaron que las cenizas del PCC afectan negativamente la supervivencia y el comportamiento en varios taxones de insectos, incluidas las abejas, el efecto de la deposición de ceniza en las interacciones planta-polinizador (IPP) asociadas a éstas últimas no ha sido investigado en paisajes naturales. Evaluamos el efecto del gradiente de creciente grosor de la capa de cenizas (0-15 cm.) en: (1) el número de abejas silvestres visitando flores de frambuesa y riqueza total de abejas en 16 campos, (2) el número de abejorros nativos (Bombus dahlbomii) e invasores (B. terrestris y B. ruderatus) forrajeando en flores silvestres en 10 sitios, y (3) la proporción de las flores “disparadas” (flores papilionáceas visitadas por primera vez por abejas de gran tamaño) en 32 poblaciones del arbusto invasor Cytisus scoparius (retama). Con el aumento en el espesor de la capa de ceniza, encontramos una fuerte y consistente disminución de: (1) el número de abejas silvestres y la riqueza de abejas totales en flores de frambuesa; (2) el número de abejorros, en particular de B. terrestris, visitando flores silvestres; y (3) la proporción de flores de retama disparadas. Las erupciones volcánicas pueden afectar fuertemente a la fauna de abejas y las interacciones planta-polinizador, con posibles efectos en cascada sobre el servicio de polinización de cultivos, la expansión de abejorros invasores y el éxito de polinización de una planta invasora. Asociación Argentina de Ecología 2014-04-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://ojs.ecologiaaustral.com.ar/index.php/Ecologia_Austral/article/view/36 10.25260/EA.14.24.1.0.36 Ecología Austral; Vol. 24 No. 1 (2014): April 2014, Pages 1-132; 42-50 Ecología Austral; Vol. 24 Núm. 1 (2014): April 2014, Pages 1-132; 42-50 1667-782X 0327-5477 eng https://ojs.ecologiaaustral.com.ar/index.php/Ecologia_Austral/article/view/36/39 Derechos de autor 2014 Carolina Morales, Adriana Saez, Marina P. Arbetman, Laura Cavallero, Marcelo A. Aizen https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/