Article

Pereira, F. W., M. L. Araujo, F. T. Brum, G. A. R. Melo, M. O. Moura, and R. B. Gonçalves. 2024. Bees travelling south: Climate‐induced range shifts and suitable habitat losses in south‐eastern neotropics. Journal of Biogeography 51: 2259–2273. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14989

Aim To provide an assessment of climate change impacts on a set of wild pollinators restricted to one of the regions with the greatest diversity of bees in the world. Also, we aimed to test whether functional groups responded differently to climate projections.LocationSouth‐eastern South America (SES).TaxonBees (Hymenoptera: Apidae sensu lato).MethodsWe selected 18 species of bees mostly restricted to the SES region, modelled their distributions and assessed the possible impacts of near future (2050) climate change in species richness and shifts in range centroids. Potential impacts related to different functional groups were evaluated through t‐tests.ResultsSES species richness was projected to decrease in the northernmost regions and increase southward. Most bee species were predicted to shift their range centroids towards the south‐west and south, while suitable stable areas were found in southern Brazil. We also found higher proportional losses in suitable areas for eusocial species compared to solitary ones, while generalists showed slightly lower gains than specialists.Main ConclusionSES bees are likely to undergo changes in the near future, with projected losses of species at northern portions and southward increases. The identified stable areas in southern Brazil underscore the importance of conservation efforts in the region, particularly in natural grasslands – an endangered habitat with high bee diversity. Although our results suggest higher vulnerability for functional groups traditionally considered more resilient, it is essential to acknowledge that other factors, including habitat and mutualists availability, behavioural particularities, phenology and range size, must be determinants for the vulnerability of species to ongoing climate change.

Moacyr Alvarenga

1915 – 2010

Apidae

Collecté Apidae et identifié Erotylidae

George Edward Bohart

21 septembre 1916 – 13 juillet 1998

États-Unis

Andrenidae

Collecté Andrenidae et identifié Andrenidae

Richard M. Bohart

28 septembre 1913 – 01 février 2007

États-Unis

Andrenidae

Collecté Andrenidae et identifié Crabronidae

John Keith Bouseman

11 août 1936 – 13 mai 2006

Ixodidae

Collecté Ixodidae et identifié Andrenidae

Hermann Burmeister
Hermann Burmeister

15 janvier 1807 – 02 mai 1892

Argentina; Swedish Pomerania; Kingdom of Prussia

Asteraceae

Collecté Asteraceae et identifié Toxodontidae

Adolpho Ducke

19 octobre 1876 – 05 janvier 1959

Austria-Hungary; Brazil

Fabaceae

Collecté Fabaceae et identifié Fabaceae

Heinrich Friese

04 mai 1860 – 08 septembre 1948

Germany; German Reich

Apidae

Collecté Apidae et identifié Apidae

Terry Griswold

États-Unis

Andrenidae

Collecté Andrenidae et identifié Megachilidae

Paul David Hurd, Jr.

02 avril 1921 – 12 mars 1982

États-Unis

Apidae

Collecté Apidae et identifié Apidae

Charles Duncan Michener
Charles Duncan Michener

22 septembre 1918 – 01 november 2015

États-Unis

Apidae

Collecté Apidae et identifié Halictidae

Charles W. O'Brien
Charles W. O'Brien

27 mars 1933 – 10 août 2019

Curculionidae

Collecté Curculionidae et identifié Curculionidae

Grace Sandhouse
Grace Sandhouse

01 juin 1896 – 09 november 1940

États-Unis

Apidae

Collecté Apidae et identifié Megachilidae

F. Christian Thompson

24 avril 1944 – 04 février 2021

États-Unis

Syrphidae

Collecté Syrphidae et identifié Syrphidae

Ignatz Urban
Ignatz Urban

07 janvier 1848 – 07 janvier 1931

Kingdom of Prussia; German Reich

Fabaceae

Collecté Fabaceae et identifié Rubiaceae