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Interactive effects of climate and land use on pollinator diversity differ among taxa and scales

Cristina Ganuza, Sarah Redlich, Johannes Uhler,Cynthia Tobisch,Sandra Rojas-Botero, Marcell K. Peters, Jie Zhang, Caryl S. Benjamin, Jana Englmeier, Joerg Ewald, Ute Fricke, Maria Haensel, Johannes Kollmann,Rebekka Riebl, Lars Uphus, Joerg Mueller, Ingoif Steffan-Dewenter

SCIENCE ADVANCES(2022)

Cited 15|Views36
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Abstract
Changes in climate and land use are major threats to pollinating insects, an essential functional group. Here, we unravel the largely unknown interactive effects of both threats on seven pollinator taxa using a multiscale spacefor-time approach across large climate and land-use gradients in a temperate region. Pollinator community composition, regional gamma diversity, and community dissimilarity (beta diversity) of pollinator taxa were shaped by climate-land-use interactions, while local alpha diversity was solely explained by their additive effects. Pollinator diversity increased with reduced land-use intensity (forest < grassland < arable land < urban) and high flowering-plant diversity at different spatial scales, and higher temperatures homogenized pollinator communities across regions. Our study reveals declines in pollinator diversity with land-use intensity at multiple spatial scales and regional community homogenization in warmer and drier climates. Management options at several scales are highlighted to mitigate impacts of climate change on pollinators and their ecosystem services.
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Key words
pollinator diversity,climate,land use
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