ESA Annual Meetings Online Program

0551 Post wildfire survival of native bees in sagebrush steppe

Monday, November 14, 2011: 10:39 AM
Room A4, First Floor (Reno-Sparks Convention Center)
Byron Love , Biology, Utah State University, Logan, UT
This study investigates the bee guilds sampled from a 15-year chronosequence of past large wildfire sites across sage-steppe habitats in the Great Basin. Paired plots were established far into the burn (>100 meters) and outside the burn to compare the following habitat characteristics: bee density in patches of target flowering hosts, the richness and similarity of bee communities; and the diversity, and density, of forbs and shrubs. Preliminary results indicate that any and all life stages of most cavity- and ground-nesting wild bees will escape injury from wildfire. Furthermore, in relatively mild burns of intact sage-steppe plant communities, entire bee communities exhibit excellent prospects for survival. However, where forbs do not bloom in the year following fire (especially in previously depauperate communities or hotter fires), surviving bee communities will need supplemental forage that blooms reliably the year after seeding.

doi: 10.1603/ICE.2016.59831

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