Data from: Phenotypic integration in an extended phenotype: among‐individual variation in nest‐building traits of the alfalfa leafcutting bee (Megachile rotundata)
Structures such as nests and burrows are an essential component of many organisms’ life-cycle and requires a complex sequence of behaviors. Because behaviors can vary consistently among individuals and be correlated with one another, we hypothesized that these structures would 1) show evidence of am...
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Zusammenfassung: | Structures such as nests and burrows are an essential component of many
organisms’ life-cycle and requires a complex sequence of behaviors.
Because behaviors can vary consistently among individuals and be
correlated with one another, we hypothesized that these structures would
1) show evidence of among-individual variation, 2) be organized into
distinct functional modules, and 3) show evidence of trade-offs among
functional modules due to limits on energy budgets. We tested these
hypotheses using the alfalfa leafcutting bee, Megachile rotundata, a
solitary bee and important crop pollinator. M. rotundata constructs
complex nests by gathering leaf materials to form a linear series of cells
in pre-existing cavities. In this study, we examined variation in the
following nest construction traits: reproduction (number of cells per nest
and nest length), nest protection (cap length and number of leaves per
cap), cell construction (cell size and number of leaves per cell), and
cell provisioning (cell mass) from 60 nests. We found a general decline in
investment in cell construction and provisioning with each new cell built.
In addition, we found evidence for both repeatability and plasticity in
cell provisioning with little evidence for trade-offs among traits.
Instead, most traits were positively, albeit weakly, correlated (r ~
0.15), and traits were loosely organized into covarying modules. Our
results show that individual differences in nest construction are
detectable at a level similar to that of other behavioral traits and that
these traits are only weakly integrated. This suggests that nest
components are capable of independent evolutionary trajectories. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.n925d21 |