Scientists from Anglia Ruskin University and University of Nottingham in the UK have monitored the interactions between plants and their pollinators in the mountainous region of Egypt.
The region supports many range-restricted endemic plants and pollinators whose future may be jeopardised by the recent introduction of alien honeybees.
"The introduction of honeybee hives is a common strategy encouraged by charities and NGOs to supplement livelihoods in rural regions," said Olivia Norfolk, from Anglia Ruskin University.
The mountains are characterised by the presence of Bedouin orchard gardens which act as hotspots for biodiversity, providing valuable habitat for wild plants, pollinators and migratory birds.
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These gardens form the basis of traditional Bedouin livelihoods, but recently managed honeybee hives have been introduced to supplement their income.
The study found that introduced honeybees were extremely generalised in their foraging behaviour, visiting 55 per cent of available plant species.
However they made few visits to range-restricted plants and showed high levels of resource-overlap with range- restricted bees.
A previous study in California showed that high numbers of feral honeybees reduced bumblebee populations through intensified competition over floral resources.
The research also found that the range-restricted plants were significantly more specialised than wider-ranged counterparts.
These plants showed a much higher dependence on range- restricted pollinators and received very few visits from the introduced honeybee.
The effects of floral competition, where honeybees out- compete more efficient native pollinators, could lead to a drop in native bee visitation and a subsequent decrease in their reproductive success.
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