# Light Sensitive Bumblebee Species Are Associated With Forest Habitat and Forest‐Dominated Landscapes

**Authors:** Océane Bartholomée, Pierre Tichit, Jens Åström, Henrik G. Smith, Sandra Åström, Markus A. K. Sydenham, Emily Baird

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72351 · 2025-10-22

## TL;DR

Bumblebees with better light sensitivity are more common in forests and tend to forage on shade-tolerant plants, showing how vision shapes their habitat and foraging choices.

## Contribution

This study is the first to link pollinator visual abilities to plant niches, offering a new basis for modeling plant-pollinator interactions.

## Key findings

- Bumblebee species with high light sensitivity are more common in forest habitats and forested landscapes.
- Bumblebees with higher light sensitivity forage on plants with greater shade tolerance.
- Community-weighted eye parameters increase with forest cover and are higher in forest habitats.

## Abstract

We investigate whether the eye parameter of bumblebees—a visual trait measuring the tradeoff between light sensitivity and visual resolution—is associated with: (i) local habitats, (ii) forest cover at the landscape scale (1 km radius), and (iii) the shade tolerance of the plants they forage on. The association of bumblebee species with local habitat and forest cover at the landscape scale was analyzed using generalized linear mixed models. We combined data from the Norwegian national bumblebee monitoring program with Corine CLC+ land cover and bumblebee functional traits: eye parameter and intertegular distance. These analyses were done at the species and community level. To determine whether bumblebee light sensitivity correlated with the shade tolerance of the plant they forage on, we combined bumblebee–plant interactions from a British database with a Swedish plant trait database. Our findings showed that bumblebee species with high light sensitivity were more common and abundant in forest habitats and areas with greater forest cover, while species with high visual resolution showed the opposite trend. This pattern was reflected at the community level, as indicated by the community‐weighted mean of the eye parameter, which increased with forest cover and was higher in forest habitats. Furthermore, bumblebees with higher light sensitivity tended to forage on plants with greater shade tolerance. These results suggest that visual adaptations for light sensitivity contribute to shaping bumblebee species distributions across different scales. Our study underscores the importance of pollinator vision in understanding species niches and its value for species distribution modeling. Moreover, by relating pollinator visual abilities to plant niches for the first time, this study provides an important basis for future modeling of plant–pollinator interactions and targeted conservation measures for plants and pollinators in forested landscapes.

Bumblebee species and bumblebee communities with high light sensitivity are more common and abundant in forest habitats and forested landscapes. Bumblebees with higher light sensitivity tend to forage on plants with greater shade tolerance. Our results suggest that visual adaptations for light sensitivity contribute to shaping bumblebee species distributions across different scales.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Intertegular Distance (MESH:C535290), ITD (MESH:D015875)
- **Species:** Bombus lucorum (white-tailed bumblebee, species) [taxon 30193], Bombus sylvarum (species) [taxon 218859], Bombus jonellus (species) [taxon 85663], B. campestris [taxon 439823], Bombus wurflenii (species) [taxon 85670], Cuculus canorus (common cuckoo, species) [taxon 55661], Bombus pratorum (species) [taxon 30194], Apis mellifera (bee, species) [taxon 7460], Bombus (bumble bees, genus) [taxon 28641], Bombus lapidarius (species) [taxon 30192], Bombus bohemicus (species) [taxon 30198], Bombus soroeensis (species) [taxon 184059], Bombus cryptarum (species) [taxon 130687], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Bombus subterraneus (species) [taxon 163670], Bombus pascuorum (species) [taxon 65598], Bombus terrestris (buff-tailed bumblebee, species) [taxon 30195]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12545700/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12545700