A sticky affair: resin collection by Bornean stingless bees
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In: Biotropica, Vol. 41, No. 6, 11.2009, p. 730-736.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - A sticky affair
T2 - resin collection by Bornean stingless bees
AU - Leonhardt, Sara
AU - Blüthgen, Nico
PY - 2009/11
Y1 - 2009/11
N2 - Plant resins are used by stingless bees for nest construction and maintenance. To reveal factors that influence the bees' decision about where and when to collect resin, resin collection was studied in ten stingless bee species (Apidae, Meliponini) collecting resin at natural and artificially induced wounds of nine tree species in Borneo. Artificially induced wounds were found by bees within 1-2 d. The number of foragers at artificial wounds increased during the subsequent 5 d until resin secretion stopped or the resin hardened. At natural resin wounds, species identity and number of foragers remained constant during the observation period. Bees collected resin from some trees and ignored others. Agathis borneensis (Araucariaceae) was the most attractive resin source. The bees' visitation rate did not correlate significantly with resin wound size. Inter- and intraspecific aggression occurred at ten resin wounds. In Tetragonilla collina and Tetragonula melanocephala, we additionally recorded resin intake at colony entrances. The proportion of workers retuning with resin varied considerably between colonies. We observed attacks by ants at three of our eight focal colonies, which resulted in a significant increase in resin intake while the nest was under attack and until 1-2 d after the attack had stopped. The increase in resin collection triggered by ant attacks was even stronger than the increase following a manual destruction of the nest entrance tube.
AB - Plant resins are used by stingless bees for nest construction and maintenance. To reveal factors that influence the bees' decision about where and when to collect resin, resin collection was studied in ten stingless bee species (Apidae, Meliponini) collecting resin at natural and artificially induced wounds of nine tree species in Borneo. Artificially induced wounds were found by bees within 1-2 d. The number of foragers at artificial wounds increased during the subsequent 5 d until resin secretion stopped or the resin hardened. At natural resin wounds, species identity and number of foragers remained constant during the observation period. Bees collected resin from some trees and ignored others. Agathis borneensis (Araucariaceae) was the most attractive resin source. The bees' visitation rate did not correlate significantly with resin wound size. Inter- and intraspecific aggression occurred at ten resin wounds. In Tetragonilla collina and Tetragonula melanocephala, we additionally recorded resin intake at colony entrances. The proportion of workers retuning with resin varied considerably between colonies. We observed attacks by ants at three of our eight focal colonies, which resulted in a significant increase in resin intake while the nest was under attack and until 1-2 d after the attack had stopped. The increase in resin collection triggered by ant attacks was even stronger than the increase following a manual destruction of the nest entrance tube.
KW - Ecosystems Research
KW - Agathis
KW - tropical rain forest
KW - Trigona
KW - tree resin
KW - terpenes
KW - Southeast Asia
KW - nest defense
KW - Meliponini
KW - dipterocarps
KW - agathis
KW - diterocaps
KW - meliponini
KW - nest defense
KW - Southeast Asia
KW - terpenes
KW - tree resin
KW - tropical rain forest
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70449469160&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00535.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00535.x
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 41
SP - 730
EP - 736
JO - Biotropica
JF - Biotropica
SN - 1744-7429
IS - 6
ER -