Abstract:
This study examined the bee fauna of the Carolinian Zone in Ontario, Canada. In 2003,
15687 individuals from 152 species of bees were collected. Tliere were many rare species but
few abundant species. There were three distinct bee seasons. The Niagara bee assemblage was
less diverse compared to other Carolinian Zone assemblages and types of landscapes.
This study also examined how anthropogenic disturbance affects the diversity of bee
assemblages. The intermediate disturbance hypothesis (IDH) was tested by selecting field sites
subject to low, intermediate, and high disturbance. Intermediate disturbance had the highest
species richness (SR=1 15) and most bees (N=556I), followed by low disturbance (SR= 100,
N=2975), then high disturbance (SR=72, N=1364), supporting the IDH. Increased species
richness in areas of intermediate disturbance was due to higher abundance, possibly because
more blooming flowers were found there. Bees were larger in high disturbance areas but smaller
in areas of high and intermediate disturbance.