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Estimating the populations of three species of Volucella in an English woodland. Roger Morris Stuart Ball. Volucella species studied. V. inflata. V. pellucens. V. bombylans. Study site – Old Sulehay Forest, BCNP Wildlife Trust Reserve. 35 hectares of ancient semi-natural woodland
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Estimating the populations of three species of Volucella in an English woodland Roger Morris Stuart Ball
Volucella species studied V. inflata V. pellucens V. bombylans
Study site – Old Sulehay Forest, BCNP Wildlife Trust Reserve • 35 hectares of ancient semi-natural woodland • Managed as hazel coppice with oak/ash standards before 1940s • Main ride is well managed and open
Sampling sites in the wood 20 visitsfrom 7 June to 27 July 2003
Numbers marked and recaptured 160 out of 985 marked flies were recaptured at least once = 16.25%
Some practical lessons • The consistency of paint is important - too thin and the insect gets covered (and may be fatally damaged) • Species with hairy thoraxes are much harder to mark clearly • Constant effort is needed to ensure that new recruits to the population are marked before they displace existing members or disperse themselves
V. bombylans population estimates φ = 0.714 (0.244) φ = estimate of daily survival (standard error)
V. inflata population estimates φ = 0.853 (0.027)
V. pellucens population estimates = 0.765 (0.013)
Summary of population estimates Estimate of the total population of each speciesusing Schnabel’s method, Krebs (1989)
Some emerging questions? • How big is the population of V. bombylans ? • The wood is only 35 hectares! It is difficult to believe: • There are sufficient sap runs large enough to support the larvae of 650 V. inflata • There are sufficient social wasps’ nests to support 2,000 V. pellucens
Behaviour of V. bombylans • Mating strategy well known: males perch on prominent foliage and dart out at passing insects • Our results suggest males are quite mobile. Therefore likely male does not return to the same perch each day • Males moved more than females
Behaviour of V. inflata • Both sexes mainly captured around flowers • Males make rapid flights around nectar sources (bramble & shrubs) • Only one observation of copulation: male flew high round dogwood (Cornus sanguinea) and briefly coupled with female in flight • Males moved much less than females • Some evidence that males held a territory
Details of movements of male V. pellucens Consecutive captures of the same individual
Behaviour of V. pellucens • Mating strategy well known: males hover and defend an air space, dart after passing insects • Male hovering extremely sensitive to sunshine: • When the sun goes in they rapidly perch in trees • When it comes out again, equally rapidly resume hovering • Copulation observed just once. Coupling appears to be very brief and in flight, like V. inflata
Behaviour of V. pellucens (2) • Both sexes visit flowers early during emergence and are fairly mobile • Later on males almost exclusively caught hovering and become very immobile • Some evidence that males hold a territory, sometimes over several days • As season progressed, it was much more likely an individual male would be found at the same hovering post • Suggests fierce competition for hovering posts early on leads to rapid turnover
Potential for further study • Our knowledge of V. bombylans population size is incomplete • Detailed survey for potential breeding sites is needed to better understand the population dynamics of V. inflata • Questions remain over the degree to which V. pellucens moves from breeding sites to suitable territories for mate-acquisition