Data from: Parasites, depredators, and limited resources as potential drivers of winter mortality of feral honeybee colonies in German forests
Wild honeybees (Apis mellifera) are considered extinct in most parts of Europe. The likely causes of their decline include increased parasite burden, lack of high-quality nesting sites and associated depredation pressure, and food scarcity. In Germany, feral honeybees still colonize managed forests,...
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Zusammenfassung: | Wild honeybees (Apis mellifera) are considered extinct in most parts of
Europe. The likely causes of their decline include increased parasite
burden, lack of high-quality nesting sites and associated depredation
pressure, and food scarcity. In Germany, feral honeybees still colonize
managed forests, but their survival rate is too low to maintain viable
populations. Based on colony observations collected during a monitoring
study, data on parasite prevalence, experiments on nest depredation, and
analyses of land cover maps, we explored whether parasite pressure,
depredation or expected landscape-level food availability explain feral
colony winter mortality. Considering the colony-level occurrence of 18
microparasites in the previous summer, colonies that died did not have a
higher parasite burden than colonies that survived. Camera traps installed
at cavity trees revealed that four woodpecker species, great tits, and
pine martens act as nest depredators. In a depredator exclusion
experiment, the winter survival rate of colonies in cavities with
protected entrances was 50% higher than that of colonies with
unmanipulated entrances. Landscapes surrounding surviving colonies
contained on average 6.4 percentage points more cropland than landscapes
surrounding dying colonies, with cropland being known to
disproportionately provide forage for bees in our study system. We
conclude that the lack of spacious but well-protected nesting cavities and
the shortage of food are currently more important than parasites in
limiting populations of wild-living honeybees in German forests.
Increasing the density and diversity of large tree cavities and promoting
bee forage plants in forests will probably promote wild-living honeybees
despite parasite pressure. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.jh9w0vtg7 |