Arid
DOI10.3375/043.036.0414
Food Chain Restoration for Pollinators: Regional Habitat Recovery Strategies Involving Protected Areas of the Southwest
Buckley, Steve1; Nabhan, Gary Paul2
通讯作者Buckley, Steve
来源期刊NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL
ISSN0885-8608
EISSN2162-4399
出版年2016
卷号36期号:4页码:489-497
英文摘要

The steep declines over the last quarter century of wild pollinators in the Southwest among native bees, monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus L.), hummingbirds, and nectar-feeding bats have come during a time of accelerated climate change, and are likely due to a variety of stresses interacting with climatic shifts. Nevertheless, there is mounting evidence that declining availability and altered timing of floral resources along "nectar corridors" accessible to pollinators involves climatic shifts as a serious stressor that had been previously underestimated. Longitudinal studies from both urban heat islands and rural habitats in Southwestern North America suggest peak flowering of many wildflowers serving as floral resources for pollinators is occurring three to five weeks earlier in spring than a century ago, leaving "phenological gaps" in nectar resource availability for certain pollinators. To avoid the threat of what A. Dobson (Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University) and others have termed "food web collapse," a range of groups have initiated ecological restoration efforts in semi-arid zones that attempt to (a) assemble more resilient plant-pollinator food chains, and (b) hydrologically restore watercourses to ensure water scarcity will be less likely to disrupt re-assembled food chains in the face of droughts, catastrophic floods, and other correlates of global climate change. We recommend "bottom-up food chain restoration" strategies for restoring nectar corridors in protected areas on or near geopolitical and land management boundaries in all regions, but particularly in the Southwest or US-Mexico desert border states. We highlight binational and multicultural workshops facilitated to communicate about, and initiate restoration of, mutualistic relationships among plants, pollinators, and people to protected area managers on both sides of the border.


英文关键词climate change food web restoration phenological mismatch pollinators
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000386054300014
WOS关键词FLOWERING TIMES ; CLIMATE ; CONSERVATION ; PHENOLOGY ; DECLINES ; SHIFTS
WOS类目Ecology ; Forestry
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Forestry
来源机构University of Arizona
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/195153
作者单位1.Natl Pk Serv, Southwest Exot Plant Management Team, 12661 E Broadway Blvd, Tucson, AZ 85748 USA;
2.Univ Arizona, Ctr Reg Food Studies, Tucson, AZ 85748 USA
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Buckley, Steve,Nabhan, Gary Paul. Food Chain Restoration for Pollinators: Regional Habitat Recovery Strategies Involving Protected Areas of the Southwest[J]. University of Arizona,2016,36(4):489-497.
APA Buckley, Steve,&Nabhan, Gary Paul.(2016).Food Chain Restoration for Pollinators: Regional Habitat Recovery Strategies Involving Protected Areas of the Southwest.NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL,36(4),489-497.
MLA Buckley, Steve,et al."Food Chain Restoration for Pollinators: Regional Habitat Recovery Strategies Involving Protected Areas of the Southwest".NATURAL AREAS JOURNAL 36.4(2016):489-497.
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