The evolution of a pollen diet: Host choice and diet breadth of Andrena bees (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae).

Autor: Leah Larkin, John Neff, Beryl Simpson
Zdroj: Apidologie; Jan2008, Vol. 39 Issue 1, p133-145, 13p
Abstrakt: We investigate of two aspects of pollen diet of Andrena bees: the evolution of diet breadth within nearctic representatives of the genus, which includes both polylectic and oligolectic species; and host choice within an oligolectic clade of Andrena.?We also evaluate phenology. Traits were mapped onto a molecular phylogeny to identify the ancestral character states. Overall, oligolecty appears to be the basal state within Andrena, and broader diets have evolved a number of times, suggesting that specialization is not a ?dead end?. Within the oligolectic clade studied, host shifts occur predominantly between members of the same plant tribe, indicating a phylogenetic constraint to host-usage; however, shifts to other tribes are not uncommon, and may lead to adaptive radiation. Additionally, some lineages retain the ability to use pollen from an ancestral host-plant tribe. Finally, we find a correlation between using host plants in the family Asteraceae and fall emergence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index