Sociobiology (Apr 2019)

Pollen Analysis of the Post-Emergence Residue of Euglossa Bees (Apidae: Euglossini) Nesting in an Urban Fragment

  • Rafael Sousa Pinto,
  • Albeane Guimarães Silva,
  • Márcia Maria Corrêa Rêgo,
  • Patricia Maia Correia de Albuquerque

DOI
https://doi.org/10.13102/sociobiology.v66i1.3434
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 66, no. 1

Abstract

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Euglossini bees are considered pollinators of a wide variety of plants in the Neotropical region, but little is known about their floral preferences. In this study, we identified the botanical species used as pollen and nectar sources by three Euglossa species (Euglossa cordata, Euglossa townsendi, and Euglossa securigera) using pollen residue found in brood cells from trap nests installed in an urban fragment in São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil. In 14 analyzed Eg. cordata nests, 23 pollen types were observed, in 7 Eg. townsendi nests, 10 pollen types were observed, and in 1 nest of Eg. securigera, 6 morph types were identified. Solanum (Solanaceae), Zanthoxylum (Rutaceae), Mimosa pudica (Fabaceae), and Chamaecrista (Fabaceae) pollen types were common to all three bee species. Principal components analysis showed 83.04% variability on the first two axes, demonstrating substantial similarity among the samples. Solanum, Mimosa pudica, and Zanthoxylum were the principal components in the ranking. Larger diversity values (mean = 0.80) in some samples indicate that the species gathered resources in a heterogeneous manner; this resembles the findings of other studies of Euglossa. In general, the bees exhibited overlapping niches with regard to the most abundant pollens in the nests, but the females showed individual plasticity when gathering the floral resources.

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