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Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected

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Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected. / Giannini, T.C.; Costa, W.F.; Borges, R.C. et al.
In: Regional Environmental Change, Vol. 20, No. 1, 9, 01.03.2020.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Giannini, TC, Costa, WF, Borges, RC, Miranda, LDS, Costa, CPW, Saraiva, AM & Imperatriz Fonseca, VL 2020, 'Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected', Regional Environmental Change, vol. 20, no. 1, 9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y

APA

Giannini, T. C., Costa, W. F., Borges, R. C., Miranda, L. D. S., Costa, C. P. W., Saraiva, A. M., & Imperatriz Fonseca, V. L. (2020). Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected. Regional Environmental Change, 20(1), Article 9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y

Vancouver

Giannini TC, Costa WF, Borges RC, Miranda LDS, Costa CPW, Saraiva AM et al. Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected. Regional Environmental Change. 2020 Mar 1;20(1):9. Epub 2020 Feb 5. doi: 10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y

Author

Giannini, T.C. ; Costa, W.F. ; Borges, R.C. et al. / Climate change in the Eastern Amazon : crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected. In: Regional Environmental Change. 2020 ; Vol. 20, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{c24552d5260a46349c684ad99e2e93eb,
title = "Climate change in the Eastern Amazon: crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected",
abstract = "There is pressing need to anticipate the impacts of climate change on species and their functional contributions to ecosystem processes. Our objective is to evaluate the potential bee response to climate change considering (1) response traits—body size, nest site, and sociality; (2) contributions to ecosystem services (effect trait)—crop pollination; and (3) bees{\textquoteright} size of current occurrence area. We analyzed 216 species occurring at the Caraj{\'a}s National Forest (Eastern Amazon, Par{\'a}, Brazil), using two different algorithms and geographically explicit data. We modeled the current occurrence area of bees and projected their range shift under future climate change scenarios through species distribution modeling. We then tested the relationship of potential loss of occurrence area with bee traits and current occurrence area. Our projections show that 95% of bee species will face a decline in their total occurrence area, and only 15 to 4% will find climatically suitable habitats in Caraj{\'a}s. The results indicate an overall reduction in suitable areas for all traits analyzed. Bees presenting medium and restricted geographic distributions, as well as vital crop pollinators, will experience significantly higher losses in occurrence area. The potentially remaining species will be the wide-range habitat generalists, and the decline in crop-pollinator species will probably pose negative impact on pollination service. The north of Par{\'a} presented the greatest future climatic suitability and can be considered for conservation purposes. These findings emphasize the detrimental effects on biodiversity and agricultural production by climate change and provide data to support conservation planning.",
keywords = "Conservation, Crop pollination, Ecosystem service, Decision-making, Occurrence area, Tropical rainforest",
author = "T.C. Giannini and W.F. Costa and R.C. Borges and Miranda, {Leonardo De Sousa} and Costa, {Claudia Priscila Wanzeler} and Saraiva, {Antonio Mauro} and {Imperatriz Fonseca}, V.L.",
year = "2020",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "Regional Environmental Change",
issn = "1436-3798",
publisher = "SPRINGER HEIDELBERG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate change in the Eastern Amazon

T2 - crop-pollinator and occurrence-restricted bees are potentially more affected

AU - Giannini, T.C.

AU - Costa, W.F.

AU - Borges, R.C.

AU - Miranda, Leonardo De Sousa

AU - Costa, Claudia Priscila Wanzeler

AU - Saraiva, Antonio Mauro

AU - Imperatriz Fonseca, V.L.

PY - 2020/3/1

Y1 - 2020/3/1

N2 - There is pressing need to anticipate the impacts of climate change on species and their functional contributions to ecosystem processes. Our objective is to evaluate the potential bee response to climate change considering (1) response traits—body size, nest site, and sociality; (2) contributions to ecosystem services (effect trait)—crop pollination; and (3) bees’ size of current occurrence area. We analyzed 216 species occurring at the Carajás National Forest (Eastern Amazon, Pará, Brazil), using two different algorithms and geographically explicit data. We modeled the current occurrence area of bees and projected their range shift under future climate change scenarios through species distribution modeling. We then tested the relationship of potential loss of occurrence area with bee traits and current occurrence area. Our projections show that 95% of bee species will face a decline in their total occurrence area, and only 15 to 4% will find climatically suitable habitats in Carajás. The results indicate an overall reduction in suitable areas for all traits analyzed. Bees presenting medium and restricted geographic distributions, as well as vital crop pollinators, will experience significantly higher losses in occurrence area. The potentially remaining species will be the wide-range habitat generalists, and the decline in crop-pollinator species will probably pose negative impact on pollination service. The north of Pará presented the greatest future climatic suitability and can be considered for conservation purposes. These findings emphasize the detrimental effects on biodiversity and agricultural production by climate change and provide data to support conservation planning.

AB - There is pressing need to anticipate the impacts of climate change on species and their functional contributions to ecosystem processes. Our objective is to evaluate the potential bee response to climate change considering (1) response traits—body size, nest site, and sociality; (2) contributions to ecosystem services (effect trait)—crop pollination; and (3) bees’ size of current occurrence area. We analyzed 216 species occurring at the Carajás National Forest (Eastern Amazon, Pará, Brazil), using two different algorithms and geographically explicit data. We modeled the current occurrence area of bees and projected their range shift under future climate change scenarios through species distribution modeling. We then tested the relationship of potential loss of occurrence area with bee traits and current occurrence area. Our projections show that 95% of bee species will face a decline in their total occurrence area, and only 15 to 4% will find climatically suitable habitats in Carajás. The results indicate an overall reduction in suitable areas for all traits analyzed. Bees presenting medium and restricted geographic distributions, as well as vital crop pollinators, will experience significantly higher losses in occurrence area. The potentially remaining species will be the wide-range habitat generalists, and the decline in crop-pollinator species will probably pose negative impact on pollination service. The north of Pará presented the greatest future climatic suitability and can be considered for conservation purposes. These findings emphasize the detrimental effects on biodiversity and agricultural production by climate change and provide data to support conservation planning.

KW - Conservation

KW - Crop pollination

KW - Ecosystem service

KW - Decision-making

KW - Occurrence area

KW - Tropical rainforest

U2 - 10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y

DO - 10.1007/s10113-020-01611-y

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

JO - Regional Environmental Change

JF - Regional Environmental Change

SN - 1436-3798

IS - 1

M1 - 9

ER -