GROUND-NESTING BEES: THE
NEGLECTED POLLINATOR RESOURCE FOR AGRICULTURE
R.
Adhikary,
Centurion
University Technology and Management
Paralakhamundi,
Odisha, 761211
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Bees have been pollinating a substantial fraction of Earth's flowering plants
for over 100 million years, but fewer than 10 of the available 20 000
non-parasitic bee species have been managed for agricultural pollination.
These include the honey bee (Apis mellifera), alfalfa leafcutting bee
(Megachile rotundata), alkali bee (Nomia melanderi), and
several species each of mason bees (Osmia spp.) and Bumble bees (Bombus spp.).
Among these managed pollinators, only the alkali bee nests in the ground,
although ground-nesting bee taxa predominate outside of the lowland tropics.
Despite their many desirable qualities for agricultural pollination,
including fixed host fidelity (oligolecty), superior pollination
efficiencies, reliable synchronization with bloom and gregarious nesting
habits, ground-nesting bees have generally defied attempts at manipulative
management.
Progress in managing ground-nesting bees has been impeded by our
limited insights into the sensory cues and behavioural mechanisms responsible
for nest site philopatry and the recruitment of females into conspecific
nesting aggregations. Candidate cues include olfactory attractants
(mandibular, labial and Dufour's gland secretions), visual landmarks and soil
quality. The olfactory cues are likely recognized instinctively or by
imprinting, possibly at location. In contrast, visual cues are probably
learned during orientation flights, as is known for Apis and
several specie wasps. Specific hypotheses are reviewed and possible
experimental designs are proposed in the hope of encouraging resolution of
these long-standing, fundamental facets of bee biology.
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Keywords:
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Apoidea,
pollination, aggregation, oligolecty, Apis
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