Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around

Abstract When assessing changes in populations of species, it is essential that the methods used to collect data have some level of precision and preferably also good accuracy. One commonly used method to collect pollinators is colour pan traps, but this method has been suggested to be biased by the...

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Main Authors: Lars Westerberg, Hilda‐Linn Berglund, Dennis Jonason, Per Milberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7252
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spelling doaj-4ec589182d764f2a91555f6587ca53bb2021-05-04T06:13:20ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-05-011193830384010.1002/ece3.7252Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers aroundLars Westerberg0Hilda‐Linn Berglund1Dennis Jonason2Per Milberg3IFM Biology, Conservation Ecology Group Linköping University Linköping SwedenIFM Biology, Conservation Ecology Group Linköping University Linköping SwedenIFM Biology, Conservation Ecology Group Linköping University Linköping SwedenIFM Biology, Conservation Ecology Group Linköping University Linköping SwedenAbstract When assessing changes in populations of species, it is essential that the methods used to collect data have some level of precision and preferably also good accuracy. One commonly used method to collect pollinators is colour pan traps, but this method has been suggested to be biased by the abundance of surrounding flowers. The present study evaluated the relationship between pan trap catches and the frequency of flowers on small (25 m2) and large (2–6 ha) spatial scales. If pan traps work well, one should assume a positive relationship, that is, more insects caught when they have more food. However, in contrast, we found that catches in pan traps were often negatively affected by flower frequency. Among the six taxa evaluated, the negative bias was largest in Vespoidea and Lepturinae, while there was no bias in solitary Apoidea (Cetoniidae, Syrphidae and social Apoidea were intermediate). Furthermore, red flowers seemed to contribute most to the negative bias. There was also a tendency that the negative bias differed within the flight season and that it was higher when considering the large spatial scale compared to the small one. To conclude, pan trap catches may suffer from a negative bias due to surrounding flower frequency and color. The occurrence and magnitude of the negative bias were context and taxon dependent, and therefore difficult to adjust for. Thus, pan traps seem less suited to evaluate differences between sites and the effect of restoration, when gradients in flower density are large. Instead, it seems better suited to monitor population changes within sites, and when gradients are small.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7252ApoideaCetoniidaeflower colourLepturinaepan trapSyrphidae
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lars Westerberg
Hilda‐Linn Berglund
Dennis Jonason
Per Milberg
spellingShingle Lars Westerberg
Hilda‐Linn Berglund
Dennis Jonason
Per Milberg
Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
Ecology and Evolution
Apoidea
Cetoniidae
flower colour
Lepturinae
pan trap
Syrphidae
author_facet Lars Westerberg
Hilda‐Linn Berglund
Dennis Jonason
Per Milberg
author_sort Lars Westerberg
title Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
title_short Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
title_full Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
title_fullStr Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
title_full_unstemmed Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
title_sort color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract When assessing changes in populations of species, it is essential that the methods used to collect data have some level of precision and preferably also good accuracy. One commonly used method to collect pollinators is colour pan traps, but this method has been suggested to be biased by the abundance of surrounding flowers. The present study evaluated the relationship between pan trap catches and the frequency of flowers on small (25 m2) and large (2–6 ha) spatial scales. If pan traps work well, one should assume a positive relationship, that is, more insects caught when they have more food. However, in contrast, we found that catches in pan traps were often negatively affected by flower frequency. Among the six taxa evaluated, the negative bias was largest in Vespoidea and Lepturinae, while there was no bias in solitary Apoidea (Cetoniidae, Syrphidae and social Apoidea were intermediate). Furthermore, red flowers seemed to contribute most to the negative bias. There was also a tendency that the negative bias differed within the flight season and that it was higher when considering the large spatial scale compared to the small one. To conclude, pan trap catches may suffer from a negative bias due to surrounding flower frequency and color. The occurrence and magnitude of the negative bias were context and taxon dependent, and therefore difficult to adjust for. Thus, pan traps seem less suited to evaluate differences between sites and the effect of restoration, when gradients in flower density are large. Instead, it seems better suited to monitor population changes within sites, and when gradients are small.
topic Apoidea
Cetoniidae
flower colour
Lepturinae
pan trap
Syrphidae
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7252
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AT dennisjonason colorpantrapsoftencatchlesswhentherearemoreflowersaround
AT permilberg colorpantrapsoftencatchlesswhentherearemoreflowersaround
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