The American bumblebee – a species once more commonly seen buzzing around southern Ontario – is critically endangered, according to a new study led by York University.
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The researchers assessed the extinction risk of the American bumblebee, ranking the risk much higher than a federal advisory committee’s most recent assessment, which classifies the species’ extinction risk at special concern.
“This species is at risk of extinction and it’s currently not protected in any way despite the drastic decline,” said Assistant Professor Sheila Colla, an expert in bees and endangered species in the Faculty of Environmental Studies.
“Now that we have assessed the extent of the decline and located where the remaining populations are, we can look more closely at threats and habitat requirements to design an effective conservation management plan so that this species does not disappear from Canada forever,” said Colla, who co-authored and helped design the study.
Colla has been studying bumblebees in southern Ontario since the mid-2000s. This study relies on the annual data that she and her fellow researchers have collected.
The researchers found that the American bumblebee’s area of occurrence has decreased by about 70 per cent and its relative abundance fell by 89 per cent from 2007 to 2016 compared to 1907 to 2006.
“This bumblebee species now has a reduced overall range,” explained MacPhail. “It used to stretch from Windsor to Toronto, and all the way to Ottawa and into the Quebec area, but it is now only found in some core areas and has experienced a 37 per cent decrease in overall range.
“It’s now a rare sighting in Toronto,” said MacPhail. “In terms of relative abundance, compared to other bees, you’d have to catch 1,000 bumblebees to find four of this species, and that compares to finding 37 bees in the past. You could walk out the door and win the lottery and find it, or you could be searching for years and not find any.”
This study echoes Colla’s previous findings with the critically endangered rusty-patched bumblebee, once found in southern Ontario. The species has not been seen in Canada for about 10 years, and it drastically declined towards extinction without receiving protection or conservation management.
“The American bumblebee is still found in areas throughout its Canadian range and immediate action may save it from the same fate as the rusty-patched bumblebee,” said Colla.
Source: York University [April 22, 2019]
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