Floral colour change in Byrsonima variabilis (Malpighiaceae) as a visual cue for pollen but not oil foraging by oil-collecting bees.
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Data
2018
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Resumo
Pollinators search for multiple flora resources throughout their life cycle. Most studies, however, only assess how bees discriminate
floral cues in the context of nectar foraging. In the present study, we sought to elucidate whether oil-collecting bees
discriminate flowers of Byrsonima variabilis (Malpighiaceae) with petals of different colours when foraging for pollen or oil.
As the colour of the standard petal changes during anthesis, we characterised the spectral reflectance patterns of flowers
throughout anthesis and modelled chromatic perceptual space to determine how these colour patterns are perceived by bees.
Through the quantification of flower pollen in the different phases, we found that the colour of the standard petal is an honest cue
of the presence of pollen. Centridine bees preferentially visited flowers with a yellow (bee’s green) colour when searching for
pollen, but indiscriminately visited flowers with different petal colours when searching for floral oil. We suggest that standard
petals, in the species studied and others of the genus, like nectar guides, act as pollen guides, which oil-collecting females use to
detect pollen-rich flowers. Moreover, they use different floral clues during foraging for different resources in the same host plant.
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Visual signalling, Pollination, Multiple rewards, Solitary bees, Centridini
Citação
MELO, B. T. de et al. Floral colour change in Byrsonima variabilis (Malpighiaceae) as a visual cue for pollen but not oil foraging by oil-collecting bees. Science of Nature, v. 105, p. 1-10, 2018. Disponível em: <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00114-018-1572-y>. Acesso em: 12 fev. 2019.