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51.
Direct and indirect fossil records of megachilid bees from the Paleogene of Central Europe (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Aside from pollen and nectar, bees of the subfamily Megachilinae are closely associated with plants as a source of materials
for nest construction. Megachilines use resins, masticated leaves, trichomes and other plant materials sometimes along with
mud to construct nests in cavities or in soil. Among these, the leafcutter bees (Megachile s.l.) are the most famous for their behaviour to line their brood cells with discs cut from various plants. We report on
fossil records of one body fossil of a new non-leafcutting megachiline and of 12 leafcuttings from three European sites—Eckfeld
and Messel, both in Germany (Eocene), and Menat, France (Paleocene). The excisions include the currently earliest record of
probable Megachile activity and suggest the presence of such bees in the Paleocene European fauna. Comparison with extant leafcuttings permits
the interpretation of a minimal number of species that produced these excisions. The wide range of size for the leafcuttings
indirectly might suggest at least two species of Megachile for the fauna of Messel in addition to the other megachiline bee described here. The presence of several cuttings on most
leaves from Eckfeld implies that the preferential foraging behaviour of extant Megachile arose early in megachiline evolution. These results demonstrate that combined investigation of body and trace fossils complement
each other in understanding past biodiversity, the latter permitting the detection of taxa not otherwise directly sampled
and inferences on behavioural evolution. 相似文献
52.
Global information sampling in the honey bee 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Johnson BR 《Die Naturwissenschaften》2008,95(6):523-530
Central to the question of task allocation in social insects is how workers acquire information. Patrolling is a curious behavior in which bees meander over the face of the comb inspecting cells. Several authors have suggested it allows bees to collect global information, but this has never been formally evaluated. This study explores this hypothesis by answering three questions. First, do bees gather information in a consistent manner as they patrol? Second, do they move far enough to get a sense of task demand in distant areas of the nest? And third, is patrolling a commonly performed task? Focal animal observations were used to address the first two predictions, while a scan sampling study was used to address the third. The results were affirmative for each question. While patrolling, workers collected information by performing periodic clusters of cell inspections. Patrolling bees not only traveled far enough to frequently change work zone; they often visited every part of the nest. Finally, the majority of the bees in the middle-age caste were shown to move throughout the nest over the course of a few hours in a manner suggestive of patrolling. Global information collection is contrary to much current theory, which assumes that workers respond to local information only. This study thus highlights the nonmutually exclusive nature of various information collection regimes in social insects. 相似文献
53.
Nakata K 《Die Naturwissenschaften》2007,94(10):853-857
Animals obtain information from past foraging experience to adjust their foraging activity according to their environment.
The ability of spiders to obtain information from unsuccessful predation experiences was investigated by examining the effects
on web building, a significant foraging investment, of prey detection without successful capture in the orb-web spider Cyclosa octotuberculata. Four treatments were employed: (1) successful capture and feeding: one syrphid fly was allowed to be captured and consumed
by the spider on the web; (2) single prey-item detection: a syrphid fly was placed on the web to lure the spider, but was
removed before capture; (3) five prey-item detection: above prey-item detection stimulus was given five times; and, (4) control:
neither prey nor feeding on the web. While control spiders decreased the total thread length and capture area of their webs,
prey-item detection spiders in both conditions increased them, indicating that the spider obtained information from unsuccessful
predation experience to adjust their foraging investment. The fed spiders exhibited a significantly greater increase than
the prey-detection-only spiders, suggesting that prey detection alone and prey detection with consumption had different informational
effects. Total thread length did not differ between single and five prey-item detection spiders, but distance between two
adjacent sticky spirals increased only in the former spiders, possibly because five times unsuccessful predations prevented
spiders to reduce web stickiness. It suggests that the spider changed web morphology according to the number of prey detection. 相似文献
54.
Building on IUCN Regional Red Lists to Produce Lists of Species of Conservation Priority: a Model with Irish Bees 总被引:2,自引:1,他引:2
ÚNA FITZPATRICK‡ TOMÁS E. MURRAY† ROBERT J. PAXTON† MARK J. F. BROWN 《Conservation biology》2007,21(5):1324-1332
Abstract: A World Conservation Union (IUCN) regional red list is an objective assessment of regional extinction risk and is not the same as a list of conservation priority species. Recent research reveals the widespread, but incorrect, assumption that IUCN Red List categories represent a hierarchical list of priorities for conservation action. We developed a simple eight-step priority-setting process and applied it to the conservation of bees in Ireland. Our model is based on the national red list but also considers the global significance of the national population; the conservation status at global, continental, and regional levels; key biological, economic, and societal factors; and is compatible with existing conservation agreements and legislation. Throughout Ireland, almost one-third of the bee fauna is threatened (30 of 100 species), but our methodology resulted in a reduced list of only 17 priority species. We did not use the priority species list to broadly categorize species to the conservation action required; instead, we indicated the individual action required for all threatened, near-threatened, and data-deficient species on the national red list based on the IUCN's conservation-actions template file. Priority species lists will strongly influence prioritization of conservation actions at national levels, but action should not be exclusive to listed species. In addition, all species on this list will not necessarily require immediate action. Our method is transparent, reproducible, and readily applicable to other taxa and regions. 相似文献
55.
We examined the influence of female feeding regime on polyandry in the nuptially feeding nursery web spider (Pisaura mirabilis). In this species, the nuptial gift, a dead prey item wrapped in the male’s silk, is physically separate from the ejaculate.
We manipulated female feeding regime (starved or fed) and the presence or absence of a gift with three successive males to
test direct-benefits hypotheses (nuptial gift or sperm supply) for the expression of polyandry. The presence of a gift was
necessary for copulation, as no male without a gift successfully copulated. Female mating behavior most strongly supports
polyandry due to the accumulation of gifted food items (“nuptial gift” direct-benefits hypothesis). Starved females that were
presented with a gift accepted significantly more gifts and inseminations than fed females. Most starved females (74%) copulated
two or more times, as opposed to only 3% of the fed females. Nearly all of the females that accepted a gift subsequently copulated.
The nuptial gift item seems to function as male mating effort and females appear to receive multiple matings as part of a
feeding strategy. 相似文献