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Spatial mismatch between wild bee diversity hotspots and protected areas
Authors:Joan Casanelles-Abella  Simone Fontana  Eliane Meier  Marco Moretti  Betrand Fournier
Institution:1. Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland;2. Nature Conservation and Landscape Ecology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

Abteilung Natur und Landschaft, Amt für Natur, Jagd und Fischerei, Kanton St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland;3. Agroecology and Environment, Agroscope, Zurich, Switzerland;4. Institute of Environmental Sciences and Geography, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

Abstract:Wild bees are critical for multiple ecosystem functions but are currently threatened. Understanding the determinants of the spatial distribution of wild bee diversity is a major research gap for their conservation. We modeled wild bee α and β taxonomic and functional diversity in Switzerland to uncover countrywide diversity patterns and determine the extent to which they provide complementary information, assess the importance of the different drivers structuring wild bee diversity, identify hotspots of wild bee diversity, and determine the overlap between diversity hotspots and the network of protected areas. We used site-level occurrence and trait data from 547 wild bee species across 3343 plots and calculated community attributes, including taxonomic diversity metrics, community mean trait values, and functional diversity metrics. We modeled their distribution with predictors describing gradients of climate, resource availability (vegetation), and anthropogenic influence (i.e., land-use types and beekeeping intensity). Wild bee diversity changed along gradients of climate and resource availability; high-elevation areas had lower functional and taxonomic α diversity, and xeric areas harbored more diverse bee communities. Functional and taxonomic β diversities diverged from this pattern, with high elevations hosting unique species and trait combinations. The proportion of diversity hotspots included in protected areas depended on the biodiversity facet, but most diversity hotspots occurred in unprotected land. Climate and resource availability gradients drove spatial patterns of wild bee diversity, resulting in lower overall diversity at higher elevations, but simultaneously greater taxonomic and functional uniqueness. This spatial mismatch among distinct biodiversity facets and the degree of overlap with protected areas is a challenge to wild bee conservation, especially in the face of global change, and calls for better integrating unprotected land. The application of spatial predictive models represents a valuable tool to aid the future development of protected areas and achieve wild bee conservation goals.
Keywords:Anthophila  biodiversity facet  community-based conservation  elevation gradient  protected area  Switzerland  urbanization  antófilos  área protegida  conservación basada en la comunidad  gradiente de elevación  faceta de la biodiversidad  Suiza  urbanización  蜜蜂  生物多样性各个方面  基于社区的保护  海拔梯度  保护地  瑞士  城市化
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