The intersection of bee and flower sexes: pollen presence shapes sex-specific bee foraging associations in sunflower

Author:

Roch Justin C12ORCID,Malfi Rosemary3,Van Wyk Jennifer I1,Muñoz Agudelo Deicy Carolina12,Milam Joan4,Adler Lynn S12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA 01003 , USA

2. Graduate Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA 01003 , USA

3. Massachusetts Pollinator Network, Northeast Organic Farming Association , Florence, MA 01062 , USA

4. Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA 01003 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Foraging preferences are known to differ among bee taxa, and can also differ between male and female bees of the same species. Similarly, bees can prefer a specific flower sex, particularly if only one sex provides pollen. Such variation in foraging preferences could lead to divergent bee communities visiting different flower sexes of a plant species. We sampled bees visiting sunflowers to characterize bee species richness, abundance, and sex ratios on pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile cultivars. We asked whether female or male bees were more abundant on sunflowers, whether female bees were more abundant on pollen-fertile or pollen-sterile cultivars, and whether pollen presence predicted the sex of sampled bees. We further asked whether the bee community differed between pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile cultivars. Females of most bee species were more abundant on sunflowers compared to males, and females were usually more abundant on pollen-fertile cultivars. In three bee species, pollen presence was predictive of a bee’s sex, with females more abundant on pollen-fertile cultivars than males. Further, the bee community differed significantly between pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile cultivars, with two bee species functioning as indicators for pollen-fertile sunflowers. Our results demonstrate that a bee’s sex shapes foraging associations on sunflowers and influences abundance between pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile cultivars, and that pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile cultivars are visited by different bee communities. Bee sexes and flower pollen presence may be under-appreciated factors shaping pollination services in both agricultural and natural ecosystems, and could be important considerations for pollination of crops with pollen-fertile and pollen-sterile flowers.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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