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Consistent mixing of near and distant resources in foraging bouts by the solitary mason bee Osmia lignaria
Authors:Williams, Neal M.   Tepedino, Vincent J.
Affiliation:aDepartment of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-5245, USA bUSDA Bee Biology and Systematics Laboratory, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84321-5310, USA
Abstract:Female bees are usually confronted with a choice among severalflower species that differ in their location and abundance withinthe community, and in the efficiency with which their pollenand nectar can be harvested. We investigated the effects ofdistance and flower density of two flower species on pollencollection by providing nest locations for the mason bee Osmialignaria in natural settings. Distance weakly affected pollenuse; on average, bees nesting near a flower species tended tocollect more of its pollen than did bees nesting at a greaterdistance. Flower density did not predictably impact pollen use,and use did not track changes in density during the season.Bees consistently mixed pollen from more distant species, despitesubstantial added foraging costs, and also mixed when one specieswas an order of magnitude less abundant than the other. Beesrequire nectar as well as pollen to feed their offspring, andour preliminary data suggest that the efficiencies of pollenand nectar collection are inversely related between the twoflower species, which would favor visitation to both species.Bees appear to collect some pollen from the low-pollen, high-nectarplant while visiting it for nectar. Thus, a nectar-collectingconstraint may favor collecting pollen from mixtures of species.
Keywords:central place foraging   complementary nutrients   nectar   Osmia   pollen   resource abundance   solitary bee   spatial distribution.
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