Host recognition in a pollen-specialist bee: evidence for a genetic basis
Author(s)
Praz, Christophe J.
Müller, Andreas
Dorn, Silvia
Date issued
2008
In
Apidologie, EDP Sciences, 2008/39/5/547-557
Subjects
<i>Heriades truncorum</i> Megachilidae oligolectie reconnaissance de l’hôte empreinte sélection de l’hôte selon Hopkin pollen Asteraceae Oligolektie Prägung HopkinscheWirtsselektion <i>Heriades truncorum</i> Wirtserkennung oligolecty imprinting Hopkin's host selection <i>Heriades truncorum</i> host recognition
Abstract
To investigate the effect of larval pollen diet on floral choice in a specialized bee species, we compared the floral preferences of individuals of <i>Heriades truncorum</i> (Megachilidae) reared on host pollen with those of individuals reared on two different types of non-host pollen. Females were allowed to nest in cages where both host and non-host flowers were available. All females, regardless of larval diet, restricted pollen collection to their host, although they visited the flowers of both host and non-host plants for nectar. When offered only the non-host pollen source, females ceased nesting activities. Males reared on non-host pollen exclusively restricted their patrolling flights to flowers of their normal host. This study provides the first empirical investigation of the imprinting theory in oligolectic bees, and unambiguously suggests that host recognition has a genetic basis in <i>H. truncorum</i>. We discuss the implication of this finding for the understanding of bee-flower relationships.
Alternative title
Reconnaissance de l’hôte par une abeille spécialiste par rapport au pollen : preuve d’une base génétique
Publication type
journal article
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
Praz_Christophe_J._-_Host_recognition_in_a_pollen-specialist_bee_20120402.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
1.34 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
