Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

Variation in Bee Body Size Due to Anthropogenic Land Use

Abstract

This study investigates the impact of anthropogenic land use on the body size of bees across 18 different species. Adult bee body size, primarily influenced by developmental nutrition, is significantly affected by the availability of floral resources. Developed land often has reduced floral diversity and density is hypothesized to produce smaller bees due to limited food resources. Specimens from the UCSB Invertebrate Zoology Collection were categorized based on their collection sites into three land use types: developed, agricultural, and forest using USGS National Land Cover Database. Measurements of head width, intertegular distance (ITD), and dry mass were taken to assess body size. A body size index was calculated as the average of these measurements. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) were done in Python version 3.12.4. Results indicate that bees from agricultural habitats are significantly larger than those from developed and forest habitats across all metrics (head width, ITD, dry mass, and body size index). These findings highlight the influence of landscape changes on bee functional traits, providing essential insights into the ecological consequences of land use on bee health.

This poster was presented at the UCSB CSEP summer colloquium 2024.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View