Literature DB >> 10714881

Origins and ecological consequences of pollen specialization among desert bees.

R L Minckley1, J H Cane, L Kervin.   

Abstract

An understanding of the evolutionary origins of insect foraging specialization is often hindered by a poor biogeographical and palaeoecological record. The historical biogeography (20,000 years before present to the present) of the desert-limited plant, creosote bush (Larrea tridentata), is remarkably complete. This history coupled with the distribution pattern of its bee fauna suggests pollen specialization for creosote bush pollen has evolved repeatedly among bees in the Lower Sonoran and Mojave deserts. In these highly xeric, floristically depauperate environments, species of specialist bees surpass generalist bees in diversity, biomass and abundance. The ability of specialist bees to facultatively remain in diapause through resource-poor years and to emerge synchronously with host plant bloom in resource-rich years probably explains their ecological dominance and persistence in these areas. Repeated origins of pollen specialization to one host plant where bloom occurs least predictably is a counter-example to prevailing theories that postulate such traits originate where the plant grows best and blooms most reliably Host-plant synchronization, a paucity of alternative floral hosts, or flowering attributes of creosote bush alone or in concert may account for the diversity of bee specialists that depend on this plant instead of nutritional factors or chemical coevolution between floral rewards and the pollinators they have evolved to attract.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10714881      PMCID: PMC1690526          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2000.0996

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  9 in total

1.  Climate-associated phenological advances in bee pollinators and bee-pollinated plants.

Authors:  Ignasi Bartomeus; John S Ascher; David Wagner; Bryan N Danforth; Sheila Colla; Sarah Kornbluth; Rachael Winfree
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-12-05       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Specialist Osmia bees forage indiscriminately among hybridizing Balsamorhiza floral hosts.

Authors:  James H Cane
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2011-04-06       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  Resource assurance predicts specialist and generalist bee activity in drought.

Authors:  Robert L Minckley; T'ai H Roulston; Neal M Williams
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2013-03-27       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Phenological shifts and the fate of mutualisms.

Authors:  Nicole E Rafferty; Paul J CaraDonna; Judith L Bronstein
Journal:  Oikos       Date:  2015-01-01       Impact factor: 3.903

5.  Critical Transitions in Plant-Pollinator Systems Induced by Positive Inbreeding-Reward-Pollinator Feedbacks.

Authors:  Heng Huang; Paolo D'Odorico
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2020-01-07

6.  Joint Impacts of Drought and Habitat Fragmentation on Native Bee Assemblages in a California Biodiversity Hotspot.

Authors:  Keng-Lou James Hung; Sara S Sandoval; John S Ascher; David A Holway
Journal:  Insects       Date:  2021-02-05       Impact factor: 2.769

7.  Pollinator assemblage and pollen load differences on sympatric diploid and tetraploid cytotypes of the desert-dominant Larrea tridentata.

Authors:  Robert G Laport; Robert L Minckley; Diana Pilson
Journal:  Am J Bot       Date:  2021-02-12       Impact factor: 3.844

8.  Shrubs as magnets for pollination: A test of facilitation and reciprocity in a shrub-annual facilitation system.

Authors:  Ally Ruttan; Christopher J Lortie; Stephanie M Haas
Journal:  Curr Res Insect Sci       Date:  2021-01-14

9.  Trait evolution is reversible, repeatable, and decoupled in the soldier caste of turtle ants.

Authors:  Scott Powell; Shauna L Price; Daniel J C Kronauer
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 11.205

  9 in total

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