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Invasion Status and Potential Ecological Impacts of an Invasive Alien Bumblebee, Bombus terrestris L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) Naturalized in Southern Hokkaido, Japan
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Citations
34
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
BiologyTerrestrial ArthropodBiodiversityEngineeringInvasion StatusInvasion BiologyPlant-insect InteractionInvasive Alien BumblebeeNatural SciencesEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyNaturalized B. TerrestrisBombus Terrestris L.Insect ConservationPest ManagementSouthern HokkaidoConservation Biology
In 1996, a naturally occurring nest of an introduced bumblebee, Bombus terrestris L., was found in Monbetsu in the Hidaka region of southern Hokkaido, indicating that it had become naturalized in Japan. In this region, monitoring of B. terrestris has been continued at two sites. The numbers of B. terrestris captured or observed have increased rapidly during the eight years since the evidence of its naturalization was found. Seasonally, the queens of naturalized B. terrestris have appeared as early as mid-April each spring. Queens were observed continuously during the period from April to October, workers from May to October, and males from July to October. B. terrestris was shown to forage among various flowering plants, 40% −70% of the species of flowering plants upon which native bumblebees fed. Nine of ten natural nests of B. terrestris discovered during the study were found in abandoned underground rodent nests. The nest sites of this species were similar to those of B. hypocrita sapporoensis Cockerell, and B. diversus tersatus Smith. B. terrestris clearly has the potential to compete with native bumblebees for floral resources and nest sites. The mean number of new queens born in the colonies of B. terrestris was 4.4 times larger than that of the native bumblebees. This strongly suggested superior reproductive ability of B. terrestris compared with native bumblebees in the region.
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