Bila Dubaić, Jovana

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861f07a3-b652-4196-a808-e99c80c74b18
  • Bila Dubaić, Jovana (3)
  • Bila-Dubaić, Jovana (1)
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Author's Bibliography

Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia)

Stanisavljević, Ljubiša; Bila-Dubaić, Jovana; SImonović, Slađan; Plećaš, Milan; Davidović, Slobodan; Tanasković, Marija; Ćetković, Aleksandar

(Isola di Pantelleria: Ente Parco Nazionale, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Stanisavljević, Ljubiša
AU  - Bila-Dubaić, Jovana
AU  - SImonović, Slađan
AU  - Plećaš, Milan
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
AU  - Tanasković, Marija
AU  - Ćetković, Aleksandar
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://www.parconazionalepantelleria.it/international_meeting_apis_silvatica.php
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5965
AB  - In the modern world managed bee species are necessary for the stability and sustainability of food production, of which the western honey bee (Apis mellifera) is the best known and the single most important species (Kevan, 2007). Wild honey bees have largely become extinct throughout Europe since the 1980s, following the introduction of the ectoparasitic mite Varroa destructor and various pathogens associated with it (Crane, 1999). The honey bee has been the subject of extensive research around the world for decades, particularly in terms of preserving the health and stability of their colonies under these new pressures. In that period, the importance of rare, accidentally surviving wild and feral colonies of honey bees was largely neglected. However, several recent studies (e.g., Le Conte et al., 2007) report on the growing number of colonies that have successfully survived the Varroa mite infestation without usual chemical treatments.
Unlike in other studies on unmanaged colonies, we presented a special case of the free-living population of honey bee in a large and highly populated urban environment of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia (Southeast Europe). During the period 2011–2017, we collected a large set of observational data (>1,300 records) from the apparently dense wild/feral honey bee population. Large share of these records can not be spatially related to the existence of managed apiaries, which are very rare in the core of downtown Belgrade. We hypothesized that numerous unmanaged bee colonies and the high frequency of swarms indicate a stable, self-sustaining wild population, and not the regular influx of swarms from the managed apiaries situated more peripherally. Also, we elaborated on various plausible explanations for this extraordinary finding.
By geospatial analysis of different categories of occurrence (colonies and swarms observed in different habitats and micro-situations) in relation to the parameters of urban environments suitability for honey bees, we evaluated the patterns of distribution and long-term survival of feral colonies under urban conditions. The results indicate an extremely high and stable population density and unusually long persistence of feral colonies, which is a rare phenomenon on a global scale (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Previous isolated cases of unmanaged colony survival (unknown in urban conditions) triggered great scientific attention: understanding the factors behind these survival cases may contribute to the efforts on improving the managed honey bee health. Therefore, our results contribute to ongoing initiatives to support naturally selected resistance mechanisms against Varroa mites, and hopefully reduce the currently growing incidence of colony die-offs.
The collecting of data was based on opportunistic citizen science, which we hereby evaluate as a highly prospective approach in the study of wild/feral bees in urban areas. We believe that specifically designed citizen science projects, based on our experiences, could be implemented with a great success in other countries with similar highly urbanised circumstances; in particular, investigations should be focused on environments with comparable potentials for the unnoticed existence of unmanaged honey bees (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021).
Despite the growing global trend of urban beekeeping, little is known about the impact of urbanization on the genetic diversity of honey bees. In particular, we investigated and performed genetic analysis of 82 individual bee genomes in a portion of a sample of feral and managed honey bee colonies distributed throughout this large city, including highly urbanised areas. We established the existence of a high genetic differentiation between these two groups. Also, the comparison of mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA of bees sampled in Belgrade and in rural parts of Serbia showed that colonies of wild/feral bees have different patterns of genetic diversity. It can be concluded that urbanisation can be a positive driver of the genetic diversity of wild honey bees nesting in a highly urbanised and densely populated areas.
PB  - Isola di Pantelleria: Ente Parco Nazionale
C3  - First international meeting APIS SILVATICA: The western honey bee in nature; 2022 May 16-20; Pantelleria, Italy
T1  - Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia)
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5965
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Stanisavljević, Ljubiša and Bila-Dubaić, Jovana and SImonović, Slađan and Plećaš, Milan and Davidović, Slobodan and Tanasković, Marija and Ćetković, Aleksandar",
year = "2022",
abstract = "In the modern world managed bee species are necessary for the stability and sustainability of food production, of which the western honey bee (Apis mellifera) is the best known and the single most important species (Kevan, 2007). Wild honey bees have largely become extinct throughout Europe since the 1980s, following the introduction of the ectoparasitic mite Varroa destructor and various pathogens associated with it (Crane, 1999). The honey bee has been the subject of extensive research around the world for decades, particularly in terms of preserving the health and stability of their colonies under these new pressures. In that period, the importance of rare, accidentally surviving wild and feral colonies of honey bees was largely neglected. However, several recent studies (e.g., Le Conte et al., 2007) report on the growing number of colonies that have successfully survived the Varroa mite infestation without usual chemical treatments.
Unlike in other studies on unmanaged colonies, we presented a special case of the free-living population of honey bee in a large and highly populated urban environment of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia (Southeast Europe). During the period 2011–2017, we collected a large set of observational data (>1,300 records) from the apparently dense wild/feral honey bee population. Large share of these records can not be spatially related to the existence of managed apiaries, which are very rare in the core of downtown Belgrade. We hypothesized that numerous unmanaged bee colonies and the high frequency of swarms indicate a stable, self-sustaining wild population, and not the regular influx of swarms from the managed apiaries situated more peripherally. Also, we elaborated on various plausible explanations for this extraordinary finding.
By geospatial analysis of different categories of occurrence (colonies and swarms observed in different habitats and micro-situations) in relation to the parameters of urban environments suitability for honey bees, we evaluated the patterns of distribution and long-term survival of feral colonies under urban conditions. The results indicate an extremely high and stable population density and unusually long persistence of feral colonies, which is a rare phenomenon on a global scale (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Previous isolated cases of unmanaged colony survival (unknown in urban conditions) triggered great scientific attention: understanding the factors behind these survival cases may contribute to the efforts on improving the managed honey bee health. Therefore, our results contribute to ongoing initiatives to support naturally selected resistance mechanisms against Varroa mites, and hopefully reduce the currently growing incidence of colony die-offs.
The collecting of data was based on opportunistic citizen science, which we hereby evaluate as a highly prospective approach in the study of wild/feral bees in urban areas. We believe that specifically designed citizen science projects, based on our experiences, could be implemented with a great success in other countries with similar highly urbanised circumstances; in particular, investigations should be focused on environments with comparable potentials for the unnoticed existence of unmanaged honey bees (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021).
Despite the growing global trend of urban beekeeping, little is known about the impact of urbanization on the genetic diversity of honey bees. In particular, we investigated and performed genetic analysis of 82 individual bee genomes in a portion of a sample of feral and managed honey bee colonies distributed throughout this large city, including highly urbanised areas. We established the existence of a high genetic differentiation between these two groups. Also, the comparison of mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA of bees sampled in Belgrade and in rural parts of Serbia showed that colonies of wild/feral bees have different patterns of genetic diversity. It can be concluded that urbanisation can be a positive driver of the genetic diversity of wild honey bees nesting in a highly urbanised and densely populated areas.",
publisher = "Isola di Pantelleria: Ente Parco Nazionale",
journal = "First international meeting APIS SILVATICA: The western honey bee in nature; 2022 May 16-20; Pantelleria, Italy",
title = "Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia)",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5965"
}
Stanisavljević, L., Bila-Dubaić, J., SImonović, S., Plećaš, M., Davidović, S., Tanasković, M.,& Ćetković, A.. (2022). Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia). in First international meeting APIS SILVATICA: The western honey bee in nature; 2022 May 16-20; Pantelleria, Italy
Isola di Pantelleria: Ente Parco Nazionale..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5965
Stanisavljević L, Bila-Dubaić J, SImonović S, Plećaš M, Davidović S, Tanasković M, Ćetković A. Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia). in First international meeting APIS SILVATICA: The western honey bee in nature; 2022 May 16-20; Pantelleria, Italy. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5965 .
Stanisavljević, Ljubiša, Bila-Dubaić, Jovana, SImonović, Slađan, Plećaš, Milan, Davidović, Slobodan, Tanasković, Marija, Ćetković, Aleksandar, "Extraordinary incidence and persistence of feral honey bees in urban environments of Belgrade (Serbia)" in First international meeting APIS SILVATICA: The western honey bee in nature; 2022 May 16-20; Pantelleria, Italy (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5965 .

Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade

Bila Dubaić, Jovana; Dall’Olio, Raffaele; Davidović, Slobodan

(Taylor and Francis, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Bila Dubaić, Jovana
AU  - Dall’Olio, Raffaele
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5379
AB  - Background
In the past years, a surprisingly large number of free-living honey bee colonies was recorded in Belgrade, capital of Serbia (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Since there are no public city services that citizens could turn to if they notice a colony of free-living honey bees in their proximity, a large portion of such cases are reported to beekeepers. Owing mostly to the engagement of one Belgrade beekeeper, scientists of the Faculty of Biology University of Belgrade obtained a large set of data on free-living honey bees in Belgrade. The collected data covers a period of 7 years (2011–2017) and, after elimination of dubious and duplicated reports, the number of recorded swarms and colonies exceeded 1300.
PB  - Taylor and Francis
T2  - Bee World
T1  - Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade
DO  - 10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Bila Dubaić, Jovana and Dall’Olio, Raffaele and Davidović, Slobodan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Background
In the past years, a surprisingly large number of free-living honey bee colonies was recorded in Belgrade, capital of Serbia (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Since there are no public city services that citizens could turn to if they notice a colony of free-living honey bees in their proximity, a large portion of such cases are reported to beekeepers. Owing mostly to the engagement of one Belgrade beekeeper, scientists of the Faculty of Biology University of Belgrade obtained a large set of data on free-living honey bees in Belgrade. The collected data covers a period of 7 years (2011–2017) and, after elimination of dubious and duplicated reports, the number of recorded swarms and colonies exceeded 1300.",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis",
journal = "Bee World",
title = "Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade",
doi = "10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721"
}
Bila Dubaić, J., Dall’Olio, R.,& Davidović, S.. (2022). Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade. in Bee World
Taylor and Francis..
https://doi.org/10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721
Bila Dubaić J, Dall’Olio R, Davidović S. Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade. in Bee World. 2022;.
doi:10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721 .
Bila Dubaić, Jovana, Dall’Olio, Raffaele, Davidović, Slobodan, "Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade" in Bee World (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721 . .
4

Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade

Bila Dubaić, Jovana; Dall’Olio, Raffaele; Davidović, Slobodan

(Taylor and Francis, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Bila Dubaić, Jovana
AU  - Dall’Olio, Raffaele
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5379
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5380
AB  - BackgroundIn the past years, a surprisingly large number of free-living honey bee colonies was recorded in Belgrade, capital of Serbia (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Since there are no public city services that citizens could turn to if they notice a colony of free-living honey bees in their proximity, a large portion of such cases are reported to beekeepers. Owing mostly to the engagement of one Belgrade beekeeper, scientists of the Faculty of Biology University of Belgrade obtained a large set of data on free-living honey bees in Belgrade. The collected data covers a period of 7 years (2011–2017) and, after elimination of dubious and duplicated reports, the number of recorded swarms and colonies exceeded 1300.
PB  - Taylor and Francis
T2  - Bee World
T1  - Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade
DO  - 10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Bila Dubaić, Jovana and Dall’Olio, Raffaele and Davidović, Slobodan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "BackgroundIn the past years, a surprisingly large number of free-living honey bee colonies was recorded in Belgrade, capital of Serbia (Bila Dubaić et al., 2021). Since there are no public city services that citizens could turn to if they notice a colony of free-living honey bees in their proximity, a large portion of such cases are reported to beekeepers. Owing mostly to the engagement of one Belgrade beekeeper, scientists of the Faculty of Biology University of Belgrade obtained a large set of data on free-living honey bees in Belgrade. The collected data covers a period of 7 years (2011–2017) and, after elimination of dubious and duplicated reports, the number of recorded swarms and colonies exceeded 1300.",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis",
journal = "Bee World",
title = "Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade",
doi = "10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721"
}
Bila Dubaić, J., Dall’Olio, R.,& Davidović, S.. (2022). Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade. in Bee World
Taylor and Francis..
https://doi.org/10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721
Bila Dubaić J, Dall’Olio R, Davidović S. Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade. in Bee World. 2022;.
doi:10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721 .
Bila Dubaić, Jovana, Dall’Olio, Raffaele, Davidović, Slobodan, "Insight into Free-Living Honey Bee Population in Serbia’s Capital – A COLOSSal Walk around Belgrade" in Bee World (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1080/0005772X.2022.2151721 . .
4

Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia)

Bila Dubaić, Jovana; Simonović, Slađan; Plećaš, Milan; Stanisavljević, Ljubiša; Davidović, Slobodan; Tanasković, Marija; Ćetković, Aleksandar

(Basel: MDPI, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Bila Dubaić, Jovana
AU  - Simonović, Slađan
AU  - Plećaš, Milan
AU  - Stanisavljević, Ljubiša
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
AU  - Tanasković, Marija
AU  - Ćetković, Aleksandar
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4708
AB  - It is assumed that wild honey bees have become largely extinct across Europe since the 1980s, following the introduction of exotic ectoparasitic mite (Varroa) and the associated spillover of various pathogens. However, several recent studies reported on unmanaged colonies that survived the Varroa mite infestation. Herewith, we present another case of unmanaged, free-living population of honey bees in SE Europe, a rare case of feral bees inhabiting a large and highly populated urban area: Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. We compiled a massive data-set derived from opportunistic citizen science (>1300 records) during the 2011–2017 period and investigated whether these honey bee colonies and the high incidence of swarms could be a result of a stable, self-sustaining feral population (i.e., not of regular inflow of swarms escaping from local managed apiaries), and discussed various explanations for its existence. We also present the possibilities and challenges associated with the detection and effective monitoring of feral/wild honey bees in urban settings, and the role of citizen science in such endeavors. Our results will underpin ongoing initiatives to better understand and support naturally selected resistance mechanisms against the Varroa mite, which should contribute to alleviating current threats and risks to global apiculture and food production security.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Insects
T1  - Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia)
IS  - 12
VL  - 12
DO  - 10.3390/insects12121127
SP  - 1127
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Bila Dubaić, Jovana and Simonović, Slađan and Plećaš, Milan and Stanisavljević, Ljubiša and Davidović, Slobodan and Tanasković, Marija and Ćetković, Aleksandar",
year = "2021",
abstract = "It is assumed that wild honey bees have become largely extinct across Europe since the 1980s, following the introduction of exotic ectoparasitic mite (Varroa) and the associated spillover of various pathogens. However, several recent studies reported on unmanaged colonies that survived the Varroa mite infestation. Herewith, we present another case of unmanaged, free-living population of honey bees in SE Europe, a rare case of feral bees inhabiting a large and highly populated urban area: Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. We compiled a massive data-set derived from opportunistic citizen science (>1300 records) during the 2011–2017 period and investigated whether these honey bee colonies and the high incidence of swarms could be a result of a stable, self-sustaining feral population (i.e., not of regular inflow of swarms escaping from local managed apiaries), and discussed various explanations for its existence. We also present the possibilities and challenges associated with the detection and effective monitoring of feral/wild honey bees in urban settings, and the role of citizen science in such endeavors. Our results will underpin ongoing initiatives to better understand and support naturally selected resistance mechanisms against the Varroa mite, which should contribute to alleviating current threats and risks to global apiculture and food production security.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Insects",
title = "Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia)",
number = "12",
volume = "12",
doi = "10.3390/insects12121127",
pages = "1127"
}
Bila Dubaić, J., Simonović, S., Plećaš, M., Stanisavljević, L., Davidović, S., Tanasković, M.,& Ćetković, A.. (2021). Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia). in Insects
Basel: MDPI., 12(12), 1127.
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects12121127
Bila Dubaić J, Simonović S, Plećaš M, Stanisavljević L, Davidović S, Tanasković M, Ćetković A. Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia). in Insects. 2021;12(12):1127.
doi:10.3390/insects12121127 .
Bila Dubaić, Jovana, Simonović, Slađan, Plećaš, Milan, Stanisavljević, Ljubiša, Davidović, Slobodan, Tanasković, Marija, Ćetković, Aleksandar, "Unprecedented Density and Persistence of Feral Honey Bees in Urban Environments of a Large SE-European City (Belgrade, Serbia)" in Insects, 12, no. 12 (2021):1127,
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects12121127 . .
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