- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Mola, a U.S. Geological Survey Mendenhall Postdoctoral Fellow based at the Fort Collins Science Center, Colorado, and a former member of the Neal Williams laboratory, UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, authored the research review article with colleagues Jeremy Hemberger, a postdoctoral researcher in the Williams lab; Jade Kochanski of the University of Wisconsin, Madison; Leif Richardson of the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation; and UC Davis alumnus Ian Pearse of the Fort Collins Science Center.
Photographer Diego Delso took the cover image showing a Bombus terrestris, a buff-tailed bumble bee that is one of the most numerous bumble bee species in Europe. He captured the image on a pink mulla mulla, Ptilotus exaltatus, in Estonia.
The abstract:
"Declines of many bumble bee species have raised concerns because of their importance as pollinators and potential harbingers of declines among other insect taxa. At present, bumble bee conservation is predominantly focused on midsummer flower restoration in open habitats. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that forests may play an important role in bumble bee life history. Compared with open habitats, forests and woody edges provide food resources during phenologically distinct periods, are often preferred nesting and overwintering habitats, and can offer favorable abiotic conditions in a changing climate. Future research efforts are needed in order to anticipate how ongoing changes in forests, such as overbrowsing by deer, plant invasions, and shifting canopy demographics, affect the suitability of these habitats for bumble bees. Forested habitats are increasingly appreciated in the life cycles of many bumble bees, and they deserve greater attention from those who wish to understand bumble bee populations and aid in their conservation."
They pointed out that "Bumble bee conservation and management has garnered considerable attention because of bees' role as pollinators of economically and ecologically important crops and wild plants. The precipitous decline of several bumble bee species has been documented in the twenty-first century, raising alarm about the viability of these charismatic species (Cameron and Sadd 2020). Because of this, bumble bees have become a focal taxon for understanding and preventing the loss of insect biodiversity more broadly (Goulson and Nicholls 2016, Wagner et al. 2021). Threats to bumble bee populations include habitat loss, novel pathogen exposure, climate change, and pressures from intensive agriculture, such as pesticide applications (Cameron and Sadd 2020). One of the primary tasks for bumble bee conservation is developing a greater understanding of the habitat requirements of species throughout their life cycle and incorporating that knowledge into restoration and management plans." See more here.
An invited participant on the Western Bumble Bee Species Status Assessment Expert Group and the Native Bee Monitoring Research Coordination Network, Mola is also an organizing member (since 2020) of BOMBUSS: Building Our Methods by Using Sound Science.
Mola, who holds a bachelor of science degree in environmental studies from Florida State University, and a master's degree in biology from Humboldt State University, received his doctorate in ecology in 2019 from UC Davis. He presented his exit seminar on "Bumble Bee Movement Ecology and Response to Wildfire."
Mola also was a UC Davis Professors for the Future Fellow, receiving a year of professional development and pedagogical training. His honors also include a 2013-2018 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship of $133,500 and a 2014-2016 UC Davis Graduate Group in Ecology Fellowship of $43,000. He won the graduate student research poster competition at the 2018 UC Davis Bee Symposium for his work on "Bumble Bee Movement and Landscape Genetics."
