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Pollen Harvest by Sonoran Desert Honey Bees: Conservation Implications for Native Bees and Flowering Plants

机译:Sonoran沙漠蜜蜂的花粉收获:对本地蜜蜂和开花植物的保护意义

摘要

Managed and feral honey bee colonies (Apis mellifera) harvest immense quantities of nectar and pollen within kilometers of their nests whether they live in relatively undisturbed or agricultural habitats. Within the Sonoran Desert of southern Arizona, pollen collection by European honey bee colonies was monitored by the use of apicultural pollen traps. Managed colonies near Tucson, Arizona routinely collected from 20 to 50 kg of pollen each year. Flowering pulses (phenology) in the local flora was closely tracked by the colonies, and pollen influx into their nests usually occurred as three to four distinct seasonal peaks, although some pollen was actively harvested during 48 or more weeks every year. The range of flowers visited for pollen by the honey bee is likely the most diverse for any social or solitary bee yet studied, largely due to their massive food requirements, efficient scouting and recruitment to ephemeral flower patches, and persistence of their colonies as perennial units for many years. At most Sonoran Desert sites, honey bee colonies took pollen from at least 12 and as many as 40-50 dominant angiosperm taxa. Additionally, pollen diet breadth of feral honey bee colonies was determined microscopically from blackened below-nest refuse deposits known as bee middens. One such deposit from the Arizona-Mexico borderlands is thought to represent more than a half century of accumulated materials. Honey bees are dominant invertebrate herbivores in desert regions taking pollen and nectar in massive amounts from at least 25 percent of the local flora. Had this pollen remained on its host plants, it would have been available for transport by co-adapted insect, bird and bat pollinators which are often better at depositing viable pollen, effecting subsequent fertilization, fruit and seed set on native flowering plants. Sonoran Desert bees are predominantly specialist feeders and depend upon certain plants more than honey bees which can switch hosts at will and have a highly mixed diet. Thus, in direct competition with these alien social bees living in large colonies, native desert bees are often at a disadvantage in acquiring pollen and producing replacement offspring. Desert flowering plants, especially rare, threatened and endangered species are also adversely affected since honey bees remove most of the pollen and often are responsible for setting fewer seeds or dispersing pollen at different distances than their original pollinators once did.
机译:有管理的和野生的蜜蜂殖民地(蜜蜂)在它们的巢穴数公里内收获大量的花蜜和花粉,无论它们生活在相对不受干扰的地区还是农业栖息地中。在亚利桑那州南部的索诺兰沙漠中,欧洲蜂群的花粉收集工作通过养蜂业的花粉陷阱进行监测。亚利桑那州图森市附近的受管理殖民地通常每年收集20至50公斤花粉。菌落密切跟踪当地植物区系的开花脉冲(物候学),虽然每年每年在48周或更长时间内会积极收获一些花粉,但通常在三到四个不同的季节高峰时才将花粉流入巢中。蜜蜂所研究的用于花粉的花的种类可能是迄今为止所研究的任何社交或单生蜂中最多样化的,这主要是由于它们大量的食物需求,有效的搜寻和临时花的募集以及其作为多年生单位的种群的持久性很多年了。在大多数索诺兰沙漠地区,蜜蜂的殖民地从至少12个和40-50个主要的被子植物类群中提取花粉。此外,还通过显微镜下从被称为蜜蜂中窝的黑色巢底垃圾沉积物的显微镜下确定了野生蜜蜂群体的花粉饮食宽度。来自亚利桑那州-墨西哥边境地区的此类矿床被认为代表了超过半个世纪的累积材料。蜜蜂是沙漠地区主要的无脊椎动物食草动物,它们从至少25%的本地植物中获取大量的花粉和花蜜。如果该花粉保留在其寄主植物上,则可以由共同适应的昆虫,鸟类和蝙蝠传粉者进行运输,而这些昆虫,鸟类和蝙蝠传粉者通常更擅长沉积活的花粉,从而影响随后的受精,果实和种子在天然开花植物上的结实。 Sonoran Desert蜜蜂主要是专门的饲养者,对某些植物的依赖大于对蜜蜂的依赖,蜜蜂可以随意更换宿主并具有高度混合的饮食。因此,在与生活在大殖民地中的这些外来社会蜜蜂直接竞争时,本地沙漠蜂通常在获取花粉和产生后代的后代中处于不利地位。沙漠开花植物,尤其是稀有,濒危和濒临灭绝的物种也受到不利影响,因为蜜蜂除去了大部分花粉,并且通常负责使种子变少或使花粉散布的距离比原来的传粉者要少。

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