Data from: Bees without flowers: before peak bloom, diverse native bees find insect-produced honeydew sugars
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...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | 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 forty-two species of
wild bees visiting inconspicuous, non-flowering 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, non-floral 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. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.00t8g |