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Native bee species diversity and abundance: West Eugene Wetlands Jennifer Bergh Mentor: Dr. Sujaya Rao Crop & Soil Science Department HHMI Research Program Summer 2008 Agapostemon sp.
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West Eugene Wetlands Wetland prairie restoration site Variety of habitat types: Wet prairie Upland prairie Oak savanna Past and ongoing research: Site preparation Plant successional dynamics Management of native & invasive plant communities
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Insect Fauna of the WEW Butterflies 49 species Dragonflies & Damselflies 44 species Native bees Incomplete fauna American Rubyspot (Hetaerina americana)
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Flora of the WEW 350 species of plants Rare plants Lomatium bradshawii Lupinus sulphureus ssp. kincaidii Erigeron decumbens Aster curtus Horkelia congesta
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NW American Native Bees Natural history 10% social and semi-social 10% parasitic 80% solitary Nest provisioning Contact between mother and offspring Emergence Continuum: semi-social intermediaries (Stephen 1969)
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Why study native bees? Ecosystem parameters Identification of rare plant-pollinator interactions Restoration planning Community education
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Darwin’s Cats, Bees & Clover The identification of complex relationships clover → bumblebees → mice → cats The misnomer of doing “just one thing” (Darwin 1866)
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Objectives Catalog native bee populations at WEW Determine if two threatened Bombus species are present Bombus occidentalis Bombus franklini Identify associations between specific pollinators and native plant hosts
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Hypotheses Hypothesis #1 The West Eugene Wetlands flora and bee fauna are representative of Willamette Valley flora and bee fauna. Hypothesis #2 The West Eugene Wetlands flora and bee fauna are more diverse than those of the majority of the Willamette Valley.
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Research Products Preliminary bee fauna Preliminary phenology data Reference collections for WEW and OSU
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Methods Trapping Sweep netting Two minute counts Observation Blue fluorescent trap
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Bees of the West Eugene Wetlands Preliminary counts Total bees collected, all methods: 562 June – September 2008 Seasonal weather Spring-Summer collection patterns Seasonal population dynamics Collection locations
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Bees of the West Eugene Wetlands Apidae Bombus spp.: 81 Bumblebees Apis mellifera: 4 Honeybees Anthophorine bees: 1 Anthophora ssp. Eucerine bees: 2 Long-horned bees Melissodes spp., Synhalonia ssp., Xenoglossa ssp. Xylocopinae bees: 10 Carpenter bees
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Bees of the West Eugene Wetlands Halictidae Sweat bees: 165 Agapostemon spp. Halictus ssp. Lasioglossum ssp. Dialictus ssp. Megachilidae Leaf cutter and mason bees: 20 Osmia ssp., Megachile ssp., Coelioxys ssp.
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Bees of the West Eugene Wetlands Identification process Steps for the future Class: Insecta on the West Eugene Wetlands
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Summary-to-Date Data analysis pending positive identifications Rare plant-pollinator relationships Non-native invasives Margins Reference collection
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Continuing Work Ongoing collection to build bee fauna Define rare plant- pollinator relationships Monitor native bee populations
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Acknowledgements Dr. Sujaya Rao, OSU Dr. Bill Stephen, OSU Dr. Kevin Ahern, OSU Howard Hughes Medical Institute Sally Villegas, BLM The Nature Conservancy
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