A comparison of blue vane trap, timed targeted netting, and timed photographic collection methods for evaluating Canadian bumble bee diversity

Bumble bee (genus Bombus) populations across Canada are experiencing increases and decreases in abundance; some species are becoming more common while others are at risk of extirpation or extinction. It is important to monitor population changes so that extirpation and extinction can be prevented. C...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Armistead, Jocelyn
Other Authors: Department of Biological Sciences
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10464/17905
Description
Summary:Bumble bee (genus Bombus) populations across Canada are experiencing increases and decreases in abundance; some species are becoming more common while others are at risk of extirpation or extinction. It is important to monitor population changes so that extirpation and extinction can be prevented. Current population assessments for bumble bees, when conducted, use many different collection methods, but this limits our ability to compare across studies and understand trends. There is a call within the scientific community to create a national standard method for collecting bees. The goal of this research was to provide a recommendation for which collection methods could be used across Canada for bumble bee assessments, including assessments of species at risk. Three collection methods, blue vane traps (BVTs), timed targeted netting, and timed targeted photography, were compared with the objective of determining which method provided good diversity information, detected at-risk species, and required low sampling effort. To assess the universality of method performances across the country, surveys were conducted in three different regions of Canada, the Carolinian portion of the Mixedwood Plains Ecozone (southern Ontario), the Prairies Ecozone (Saskatchewan), and the Boreal Shield Ecozone (Newfoundland and Labrador). With some exceptions, the general structure of surveys was that BVTs were deployed for 1 week at a time, and multiple 30-minute netting and photographic surveys were conducted during each collection week. Regional differences were apparent. In the Prairies Ecozone BVTs collected the most specimens while in the other regions BVTs collected the fewest. BVTs detected the most species in the Carolinian and Prairies Ecozones, but netting detected the most species in the Boreal Shield Ecozone. For all regions, BVTs were the most efficient method at low sample sizes when compared using rarefaction. BVTs also detected the most species at risk. Distinct species compositions produced by BVTs compared to netting ...