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Data from: Floral resources shape parasite and pathogen dynamics in bees facing urbanization

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posted on 2025-08-22, 16:24 authored by Hamutahl Cohen, Lauren C. Ponisio, Kaleigh A. Russell, Stacy PhilpottStacy Philpott, Quinn S. McFrederick
<p dir="ltr">Urbanization is associated with increases in impervious land cover, which alters the distribution of resources available to wildlife and concentrates activity in unbuilt spaces such as parks and gardens. How resource shifts alter the dynamics of parasite and pathogen transmission has not been addressed for many important species in urban systems. We focus on urban gardens, resource-rich “islands” within the urban matrix, to examine how the availability of floral resources at local and landscape scales influences the prevalence of six RNA viruses and three parasites in honey bees and bumble bees. Because parasites and pathogens are transmitted at flowers between visitors, we expected that floral abundance would concentrate bees within gardens, amplifying infection rates in pollinators, unless increases in floral resources would enhance bee diversity enough to dilute transmission. We found that garden size and flowering perennial plant abundance had a positive, direct effect on parasite and pathogen richness in bumble bees, suggesting that resource provisioning amplifies transmission. We also found that parasitism rates in honey bees were positively associated with parasites and pathogens in bumble bees, suggesting spillover between species. Encouragingly, we found evidence that management may mitigate parasitism through indirect effects: garden size had a positive impact on bee diversity, which in turn was negatively associated with parasite and pathogen richness in bumble bees. Unexpectedly, we observed that that parasite and pathogen richness in honey bees had no significant predictors, highlighting the complexity of comparing transmission dynamics between species. Although floral resources provide bees with food, we suggest more research on the tradeoffs between resource provisioning and disease transmission to implement conservation plantings in changing landscapes.</p>

Funding

Biodiversity, Sustainability, And Ecosystem Services In Urban Agricultural Landscapes

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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History

Data contact name

Philpott, Stacy, M.

Data contact email

sphilpot@ucsc.edu

Publisher

Zenodo

Intended use

Both local and landscape resources are important determinants of amplification and dilution in disease systems. For bees, it is important to examine the direct effects of local and landscape resources on disease dynamics, and their indirect effects via impacts to host community composition, to elucidate how heterogenous landscapes might influence epidemiology. We address this goal in urban garden “islands” across >125 km of the California Central Coast. We first assess if a wild bee (the yellow-faced bumble bee, Bombus vosnesenskii) and a managed bee (the honey bee, Apis mellifera) are infected with similar parasite and pathogen communities and if those communities vary across garden sites. We then evaluate the direct and indirect factors responsible for parasites and pathogens. We ask whether resource availability directly amplifies or dilutes parasite and pathogen prevalence in each host species. To examine if bee community composition exerts an indirect effect, we test for a relationship between resource availability and bee abundance and diversity. We then examine if bee abundance and diversity are, in turn, associated with amplification or dilution of parasite and pathogen prevalence. Because spillover between managed and wild species is a concern, we evaluate if parasite and pathogen prevalence in one host species is associated with parasite and pathogen prevalence in the other.

Temporal Extent Start Date

2015-06-01

Temporal Extent End Date

2015-07-31

Theme

  • Not specified

Geographic location - description

Santa Clara County, California, USA Santa Cruz County, California, USA Monterey County, California, USA

ISO Topic Category

  • biota
  • environment

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

parasites; pathogens; hosts; urbanization; land cover; wildlife; parks; gardens; disease transmission; landscapes; RNA viruses; honey bees; Bombus; flowers; pollinators; flowering; perennials; parasitism; epidemiology; Apis mellifera; California

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:20 - National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

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