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  3. CSI Pollen: Diversity of Honey Bee Collected Pollen Studied by Citizen Scientists.
 

CSI Pollen: Diversity of Honey Bee Collected Pollen Studied by Citizen Scientists.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/165158
Date of Publication
November 2, 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Bienenge...

Contributor
Brodschneider, Robert
Kalcher-Sommersguter, Elfriede
Kuchling, Sabrina
Dietemann, Vincent
Gray, Alison
Božič, Janko
Briedis, Andrejs
Carreck, Norman L
Chlebo, Robert
Crailsheim, Karl
Coffey, Mary Frances
Dahle, Bjørn
González-Porto, Amelia Virginia
Filipi, Janja
de Graaf, Dirk C
Hatjina, Fani
Ioannidis, Pavlos
Ion, Nicoleta
Jørgensen, Asger Søgaard
Kristiansen, Preben
Lecocq, Antoine
Odoux, Jean-François
Özkirim, Asli
Peterson, Magnus
Podrižnik, Blaž
Rašić, Slađan
Retschnig, Gina
Institut für Bienengesundheit
Schiesser, Aygün
Tosi, Simone
Vejsnæs, Flemming
Williams, Geoffrey
van der Steen, Jozef J M
Subject(s)

500 - Science::590 - ...

600 - Technology::630...

Series
Insects
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2075-4450
Publisher
MDPI
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3390/insects12110987
PubMed ID
34821788
Uncontrolled Keywords

Apis mellifera COLOSS...

Description
A diverse supply of pollen is an important factor for honey bee health, but information about the pollen diversity available to colonies at the landscape scale is largely missing. In this COLOSS study, beekeeper citizen scientists sampled and analyzed the diversity of pollen collected by honey bee colonies. As a simple measure of diversity, beekeepers determined the number of colors found in pollen samples that were collected in a coordinated and standardized way. Altogether, 750 beekeepers from 28 different regions from 24 countries participated in the two-year study and collected and analyzed almost 18,000 pollen samples. Pollen samples contained approximately six different colors in total throughout the sampling period, of which four colors were abundant. We ran generalized linear mixed models to test for possible effects of diverse factors such as collection, i.e., whether a minimum amount of pollen was collected or not, and habitat type on the number of colors found in pollen samples. To identify habitat effects on pollen diversity, beekeepers' descriptions of the surrounding landscape and CORINE land cover classes were investigated in two different models, which both showed that both the total number and the rare number of colors in pollen samples were positively affected by 'urban' habitats or 'artificial surfaces', respectively. This citizen science study underlines the importance of the habitat for pollen diversity for bees and suggests higher diversity in urban areas.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/67209
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File(s)
FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
insects-12-00987-v2.pdftextAdobe PDF5.45 MBpublishedOpen
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