Meiners Joan M, Griswold Terry L, Harris David J, Ernest S K Morgan
Am Nat. 2017 Aug;190(2):281-291. doi: 10.1086/692437. Epub 2017 May 22.
Bee foragers respond to complex visual, olfactory, and extrasensory cues to optimize searches for floral rewards. Their abilities to detect and distinguish floral colors, shapes, volatiles, and ultraviolet signals and even gauge nectar availability from changes in floral humidity or electric fields are well studied. Bee foraging behaviors in the absence of floral cues, however, are rarely considered. We observed 42 species of wild bees visiting inconspicuous, nonflowering shrubs during early spring in a protected Mediterranean habitat. We determined experimentally that these bees were accessing sugary honeydew secretions from scale insects without the aid of standard cues. While honeydew use is known among some social Hymenoptera, its use across a diverse community of solitary bees is a novel observation. The widespread ability of native bees to locate and use unadvertised, nonfloral sugars suggests unappreciated sensory mechanisms and/or the existence of an interspecific foraging network among solitary bees that may influence how native bees cope with scarcity of floral resources and increasing environmental change.
蜜蜂采集者会对复杂的视觉、嗅觉和超感官线索做出反应,以优化对花蜜奖励的搜索。它们检测和区分花朵颜色、形状、挥发物和紫外线信号,甚至从花朵湿度或电场变化中判断花蜜可用性的能力已得到充分研究。然而,很少有人考虑蜜蜂在没有花朵线索时的觅食行为。我们观察到42种野生蜜蜂在早春时节访问了地中海一个受保护栖息地中不显眼的无花灌木。我们通过实验确定,这些蜜蜂在没有标准线索的帮助下获取了蚧壳虫分泌的含糖蜜露。虽然在一些社会性膜翅目昆虫中已知有使用蜜露的情况,但在各种独居蜜蜂群体中使用蜜露却是一个新的观察结果。本地蜜蜂广泛具备定位和利用未宣传的非花蜜糖分的能力,这表明存在未被认识到的感官机制和/或独居蜜蜂之间存在种间觅食网络,这可能会影响本地蜜蜂应对花蜜资源稀缺和环境变化加剧的方式。