CORVALLIS, Ore. -- Early results from a two-year study in southern Oregon suggest that moderate and severe forest fires create conditions that lead to greater abundance and diversity of wild bees.

Because Oregon's more than 500 species of native bees are important pollinators of wild plants and crops, the study suggests that fires may promote bee populations that in turn may influence agricultural productivity and overall floral diversity.

In 2016, scientists began trapping bees at 43 sites in forests burned by the 2013 Douglas Complex fire north of Grants Pass. The sites ranged from places where fire severity was low -- flames were confined to low-growing vegetation and failed to reach the canopy -- to places where severity was moderate and high.

"In low severity spots, if you weren't looking for the markers of fire, you wouldn't know that it had burned," said Sara M. Galbraith, a post-doctoral researcher in the College of Forestry at Oregon State University. "The canopy is completely closed, and the trees are usually older. There isn't a lot of evidence of fire except for some blackened areas on some of the tree trunks.

"And then, when you go to some of the high-severity fire sites, it's a completely open canopy. There are a lot of flowering plants in the understory because the light limitation is gone. It just looks completely different," she added.

In a study led by Jim Rivers, OSU forest wildlife ecologist, Galbraith and a team of field researchers collected bees with blue-vane traps, which attract the insects by reflecting ultra-violet light. "The bees basically think it's a huge flower," said Galbraith. "Once they get inside the trap, they are unable to fly out because of the shape of the entrance."

In addition, researchers recorded the characteristics of each site, such as the types of plants, the degree of forest cover and whether or not logging had taken place after the fire.

Such studies are important, Galbraith said, because the early stages of forest development -- what researchers call early seral forests -- have become less common. "This research adds to the evidence that there is high biodiversity in early seral forests relative to older stands, and moving forward, this could have an impact on services like pollination in the landscape overall. Without this fundamental information, we can't be sure of the best management actions to conserve pollinator populations within managed forests."

The study will conclude this year. It was funded by the federal Bureau of Land Management, the Fish and Wildlife Habitat in Managed Forests Research Program in the College of Forestry, and the Mealey/Boise Cascade/Boone and Crockett/Noble Endowment Fund in the College of Forestry.

Galbraith received a joint Ph.D. from the University of Idaho and CATIE (Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza) in Costa Rica. She will present a paper on the first year of results at the annual conference of the Ecological Society of America on August 10 in Portland. 

Source: 

 Jim Rivers, [email protected], 541-737-6581; Sara M. Galbraith, [email protected]

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