Conserving bees in destroyed landscapes: The potentials of reclaimed sand mines

Nicola Seitz, Dennis vanEngelsdorp, Sara D. Leonhardt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Sand mines represent anthropogenically impacted habitats found worldwide, which bear potential for bee conservation. Although floral resources can be limited at these habitats, vegetation free patches of open sandy soils and embankments may offer good nesting possibilities for sand restricted and other bees. We compared bee communities as found in three reclaimed sand mines and at adjacent roadside meadows in Maryland, USA, over two years. Both sand mines and roadsides hosted diverse bee communities with 111 and 88 bee species, respectively. Bee abundances as well as richness and Shannon diversity of bee species were higher in sand mines than at roadsides and negatively correlated with the percentage of vegetational ground cover. Species composition also differed significantly between habitats. Sand mines hosted a higher proportion of ground nesters, more uncommon and more ‘sand loving’ bees similar to natural sandy areas of Maryland. Despite the destruction of the original pre-mining habitat, sand mines thus appear to represent a unique habitat for wild bees, particularly when natural vegetation and open sand spots are encouraged. Considering habitat loss, the lack of natural disturbance regimes, and ongoing declines of wild bees, sand mines could add promising opportunities for bee conservation which has hitherto mainly focused on agricultural and urban habitats.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere00642
JournalGlobal Ecology and Conservation
Volume19
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bee conservation
  • Bee decline
  • Ground nesters
  • Habitat restoration
  • Land use
  • Wild bees

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