Glacier National Park bumble bee survey report 2023
Glacier National Park's grasslands provide important contributions to the character and ecology of the park. In 1999-2001, Glacier National Park (hereafter, the park) established 155 permanent vegetation monitoring plots to inventory grassland vegetation communities east of the Continental Divide. In June of 2023, the Blackfeet Nation (Amskapi Piikuni) re-introduced a herd of free roaming bison on adjacent tribal land (the linnii Initiative), and those bison may enter the park. Because grasslands are important areas for bison grazing, and because biological communities have likely changed since the initial inventories, the park’s vegetation program began revisiting grassland monitoring plots in 2018. New data will provide insights into how these grasslands, and the wildlife that depend on them, have changed over the past two decades. Data on pollinators in these grasslands, however, are limited. Bison have been shown to influence plant communities, for example, by increasing herbaceous forb diversity and drought resilience (Elson and Hartnett 2017; Ratajczak et al. 2022). These changes directly influence resources available to foraging pollinators. To provide understanding of pollinators prior to bison reintroduction, bumble bee surveying at these grassland plots began in 2020 and has continued through 2023. Target sites for 2020-2022 focused on collecting data at plots where new vegetation surveys were recently completed to match current vegetation data with the bumble bee data.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2024 |
|---|---|
| Title | Glacier National Park bumble bee survey report 2023 |
| Authors | Lindsay Marie Dose, Erica Sanderleaf Sarro Gustilo, Tabitha A. Graves |
| Publication Type | Report |
| Publication Subtype | Federal Government Series |
| Index ID | 70254281 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center |