Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz, Ilhéus, Bahia, Brazil.
Núcleo de Pesquisa da Conservação e Biodiversidade do Semiárido - CONBIOS, Observatório UniFG do Semiárido Nordestino, Centro Universitário UNIFG, Guanambi, Bahia, Brazil.
Neotrop Entomol. 2021 Apr;50(2):197-207. doi: 10.1007/s13744-020-00847-x. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
Urban areas can serve as biodiversity refuges for pollinators because of the high diversity of available floral and nesting resources. However, it remains unclear what plant species commonly used for urban landscaping provide floral resources that pollinators actively use. Here, we integrate data from the pollen and species distribution models of two abundant euglossine bees-the large-bodied Eulaema nigrita (Lepeletier, 1841) and the small-bodied Euglossa cordata (Linnaeus, 1758)-in urban areas to investigate their overlap in diet breadth and distribution. We hypothesized that because bees with larger body sizes tend to have larger foraging areas, large-bodied bees would have a wider diet breath than small-bodied bees. Contrary to our hypothesis, we found that Eg. cordata has a wider diet breadth than El. nigrita with the former species showing higher diversity of pollen types collected (per pollen load and on average across pollen loads). Pollen grains from Solanum paniculatum and Tradescantia zebrina represented 63% of the diet of Eg. cordata, whereas pollen from S. paniculatum and Psidium guajava represented 87% of the diet of El. nigrita. After overlaying the distribution of both bee species and the three most important pollen resources, the distribution models revealed that these three plant species can co-occur with both euglossine bees throughout a large portion of eastern Brazil near the coast. Thus, we conclude S. paniculatum, T. zebrina, and P. guajava should be considered key plants for the maintenance of these two urban euglossine bee species. The results of this study provide important information for urban landscaping programs that aim to protect and preserve pollinators.
城市地区可以成为传粉媒介的生物多样性避难所,因为那里有多种多样的花卉和筑巢资源。然而,目前尚不清楚哪些常见的用于城市景观美化的植物物种提供了传粉媒介积极利用的花卉资源。在这里,我们整合了两种丰富的 Euglossine 蜜蜂——大型 Eulaema nigrita(Lepeletier,1841)和小型 Euglossa cordata(Linnaeus,1758)——的花粉和物种分布模型的数据,以研究它们在饮食广度和分布上的重叠。我们假设,由于体型较大的蜜蜂往往有较大的觅食区,因此体型较大的蜜蜂的饮食范围会比体型较小的蜜蜂更广。与我们的假设相反,我们发现 Eg. cordata 的饮食范围比 El. nigrita 更广,前者收集的花粉类型多样性更高(每花粉负荷和平均花粉负荷)。Eg. cordata 的饮食中,茄属植物和紫露草的花粉粒占 63%,而 El. nigrita 的饮食中,茄属植物和番石榴的花粉粒占 87%。在叠加这两种蜜蜂物种和三种最重要的花粉资源的分布后,分布模型表明,这三种植物在靠近海岸的巴西东部的大部分地区都可以与这两种 Euglossine 蜜蜂共存。因此,我们得出结论,茄属植物、紫露草和番石榴应该被视为维持这两种城市 Euglossine 蜜蜂物种的关键植物。本研究的结果为旨在保护和保存传粉媒介的城市景观美化计划提供了重要信息。