Описание
Записи данных
Данные этого sampling event ресурса были опубликованы в виде Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), который является стандартным форматом для обмена данными о биоразнообразии в виде набора из одной или нескольких таблиц. Основная таблица данных содержит 573 записей.
Также в наличии 2 таблиц с данными расширений. Записи расширений содержат дополнительную информацию об основной записи. Число записей в каждой таблице данных расширения показано ниже.
Данный экземпляр IPT архивирует данные и таким образом служит хранилищем данных. Данные и метаданные ресурсов доступны для скачивания в разделе Загрузки. В таблице версий перечислены другие версии ресурса, которые были доступны публично, что позволяет отслеживать изменения, внесенные в ресурс с течением времени.
Версии
В таблице ниже указаны только опубликованные версии ресурса, которые доступны для свободного скачивания.
Как оформить ссылку
Исследователи должны дать ссылку на эту работу следующим образом:
Holm M, Houle M, Salem M (2025). U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Great Lakes Native Bee Survey. Version 1.0. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Occurrence dataset. https://ipt.gbif.us/resource?r=usfws_glri&v=1.0
Права
Исследователи должны соблюдать следующие права:
Публикующей организацией и владельцем прав на данную работу является United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Насколько это возможно по закону, издатель отказался от всех прав на эти данные и посвятил их Public Domain (CC0 1.0)а>. Пользователи могут без ограничений копировать, изменять, распространять и использовать работу, в том числе в коммерческих целях.
Регистрация в GBIF
Этот ресурс был зарегистрирован в GBIF, ему был присвоен следующий UUID: 13384d38-38ab-49c2-8968-f15f4e70193e. United States Fish and Wildlife Service отвечает за публикацию этого ресурса, и зарегистрирован в GBIF как издатель данных при оподдержке GBIF-US.
Ключевые слова
Occurrence; Specimen; Insects; Pollinator Species; Community Structure; Species Distribution
Контакты
- Point Of Contact
- Metadata Provider ●
- Originator
- Metadata Provider ●
- Originator
- Point Of Contact
- Wildlife Biologist, Great Lakes Pollinator Coordinator
- 2651 Coolidge Road, Suite 101
- 517-599-3156
- User
Географический охват
Great Lakes Basin Watershed within the United States.
Ограничивающие координаты | Юг Запад [40,447, -93,735], Север Восток [48,225, -75,278] |
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Таксономический охват
All bee specimens were identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible. Most specimens are identified to species or genus.
Kingdom | Animalia |
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Phylum | Arthropoda |
Class | Insecta |
Order | Hymenoptera |
Family | Halictidae, Andrenidae, Colletidae, Melittidae, Megachilidae, Apidae |
Временной охват
Дата начала / Дата окончания | 2020-06-17 / 2025-10-20 |
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Данные проекта
Native insect pollinators are important components of ecosystems, acting as keystone species, providing ecosystem resilience and economically important ecosystem services. Ninety percent of the world’s flowering plants depend on insect pollination for reproduction (Burd and Kopec 2017). However, significant population decline has occurred across the entire class Insecta worldwide (Sánchez-Bayo et al. 2019). Forty percent of the world’s invertebrate pollinators are at risk of extinction, most of which are bees and butterflies (IPBES 2016). Several pollinator species have demonstrated significant population and distribution declines across the U.S., including within the Great Lakes Basin. Critically, some species are now facing extinction, such as Poweshiek skipperling, Mitchell’s satyr butterfly, and rusty-patched bumble bee, which are federally listed as Endangered. Other once-common species are now being considered for potential protection under the Endangered Species Act, such as monarch butterfly and American bumble bee, species that could be representative of declines in other pollinators in the region. This decline in native pollinators presents a risk to biological communities, ecosystems, crop production, and has implications for human wellness (Eilers et al. 2011). In recognition of the significance of pollinators, the Great Lakes Pollinator Task Force (PTF) was established in 2018. The PTF will scale down national level efforts to conserve pollinators at the Great Lakes Basin level. This interagency, collaborative task force will use an overarching approach to pollinator conservation across the basin that is supported with Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) funding and is leveraged with expertise and funding from partners and stakeholders. The PTF is currently comprised of representatives of U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), U.S. National Forest (USFS), National Park Service (NPS), Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). The PTF envisions the Great Lakes Basin landscape supporting self-sustaining populations of native insect bees and their associated and interconnected, diverse habitats. In this vision, both the bees and their habitats are resilient to changing environmental conditions and continue to provide critical ecological services, aesthetic value, and integrity to ecosystems. Through the Great Lakes Pollinator Conservation Strategy, the PTF seek to increase pollinator community resiliency, reduce or eliminate the future need to list native insect pollinator species under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), restore diverse interconnected pollinator habitat, and increase awareness and knowledge of Great Lakes native pollinator conservation issues and collaborative efforts. The Task Force aims to catalyze native bee conservation by coordinating and funding actions that efficiently maximize native bee abundance, distribution, diversity and resilience within the Great Lakes basin.
Название | USFWS Great Lakes Native Bee Survey |
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Идентификатор | glri_ptf_bees |
Финансирование | Great Lakes Restoration Initiative |
Описание района исследования | Public lands, including National Wildlife Refuges and Waterfowl Production Areas in the Great Lakes Basin and in the Midwest Region of the USFWS. Study area sites include Whittlesey Creek National Wildlife Refuge, Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge, Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge, Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge, Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge, Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge, Malan Waterfowl Production Area, Schlee Waterfowl Production Area, Kinney Waterfowl Production Area, Edger Waterfowl Production Area, Schoonover Waterfowl Production Area and Callahan Park; a city park in Detroit, Michigan. |
Описание плана выполнения исследований | See: Holm ML. 2024. Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Pollinator Bee Survey Protocol. https://iris.fws.gov/APPS/ServCat/Reference/Profile/163982 |
Исполнители проекта:
Методы сбора
See: Holm ML. 2024. Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Pollinator Bee Survey Protocol. https://iris.fws.gov/APPS/ServCat/Reference/Profile/163982
Охват исследования | See: Holm ML. 2024. Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Pollinator Bee Survey Protocol. https://iris.fws.gov/APPS/ServCat/Reference/Profile/163982 |
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Контроль качества | Data quality control during data transfer from field data sheets to digital excel spreadsheet - manual checking of accuracy of data prior to entering in digital database. Data quality control associated with processing specimens at external laboratories processing specimens. Species-level identifications validated by appropriate taxonomic experts. |
Описание этапа методики:
- Specimens collected in field sampling locations, associated event data captured on field data collection sheets. Data from field data collection sheets transferred to digital database. Specimens sent to identification laboratories where species-level ID is validated by taxonomic experts. Data QA/QC and converted to DarwinCore format prior to upload into GBIF.
Библиографические ссылки
- Holm ML. 2024. Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Pollinator Bee Survey Protocol. https://iris.fws.gov/APPS/ServCat/Reference/Profile/163982
Дополнительные метаданные
Благодарности | Funding for the Great Lakes native bee surveys was provided by the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, through the Environmental Protection Agency. GLRI Funding was distributed to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service through the Great Lakes Pollinator Task Force. Key contributors in bee specimen identification include the Joint USGS/USFWS Native Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab (BIML) and University of Minnesota Cariveau Bee Lab. |
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Введение | Native insect pollinators are important components of ecosystems, acting as keystone species, providing ecosystem resilience and economically important ecosystem services. Ninety percent of the world’s flowering plants depend on insect pollination for reproduction (Burd and Kopec 2017). However, significant population decline has occurred across the entire class Insecta worldwide (Sánchez-Bayo et al. 2019). Forty percent of the world’s invertebrate pollinators are at risk of extinction, most of which are bees and butterflies (IPBES 2016). Several pollinator species have demonstrated significant population and distribution declines across the U.S., including within the Great Lakes Basin. Critically, some species are now facing extinction, such as Poweshiek skipperling, Mitchell’s satyr butterfly, and rusty-patched bumble bee, which are federally listed as Endangered. Other once-common species are now being considered for potential protection under the Endangered Species Act, such as monarch butterfly and American bumble bee, species that could be representative of declines in other pollinators in the region. This decline in native pollinators presents a risk to biological communities, ecosystems, crop production, and has implications for human wellness (Eilers et al. 2011). In recognition of the significance of pollinators, the Great Lakes Pollinator Task Force (PTF) was established in 2018. The PTF will scale down national level efforts to conserve pollinators at the Great Lakes Basin level. This interagency, collaborative task force will use an overarching approach to pollinator conservation across the basin that is supported with Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) funding and is leveraged with expertise and funding from partners and stakeholders. The PTF is currently comprised of representatives of U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), U.S. National Forest (USFS), National Park Service (NPS), Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). The PTF envisions the Great Lakes Basin landscape supporting self-sustaining populations of native insect bees and their associated and interconnected, diverse habitats. In this vision, both the bees and their habitats are resilient to changing environmental conditions and continue to provide critical ecological services, aesthetic value, and integrity to ecosystems. Through the Great Lakes Pollinator Conservation Strategy, the PTF seek to increase pollinator community resiliency, reduce or eliminate the future need to list native insect pollinator species under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), restore diverse interconnected pollinator habitat, and increase awareness and knowledge of Great Lakes native pollinator conservation issues and collaborative efforts. The Task Force aims to catalyze native bee conservation by coordinating and funding actions that efficiently maximize native bee abundance, distribution, diversity and resilience within the Great Lakes basin. |
Приступая к работе | Data is downloadable in .csv file format using the Darwin Core data standard. |
Цель | The purpose of this dataset is to establish a more comprehensive understanding of native bee species richness on public lands in the Great Lakes Basin via interagency collaborative surveys. Survey data will inform management decisions that provide habitat for native bees or reduce invasive species proliferation and provide baseline inventory and the ability to monitor species long-term. |
Описание частоты обновления ресурса | We try to update this annually. |
Альтернативные идентификаторы | 13384d38-38ab-49c2-8968-f15f4e70193e |
https://ipt.gbif.us/resource?r=usfws_glri_bees |