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Chalepogenus

The genus Chalepogenus, consisting of 21 species of solitary oil-collecting apid bees, demonstrates oligolecty by foraging on oil-producing flowers from the families Calceolariaceae, Iridaceae and Solanaceae.[1][2][3] These oil-flowers are abundant in South America, where Chalepogenus is endemic.[4] In contrast to honey bees, Chalepogenus species do not collect nectar; instead, they gather floral oil for various purposes, including provisioning their larvae, constructing nests, and sustaining foraging adult bees.[5] Although oil collection has been reported to be performed by females only, both males and females have specialised oil-collecting structures.[5]

Chalepogenus
Chalepogenus herbsti visiting Sisyrinchium striatum
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Apidae
Tribe: Tapinotaspidini
Genus: Chalepogenus
Observations of Chalepogenus from iNaturalist (as of October, 2023).

Distribution edit

Species of Chalepogenus are restricted to South America.[6]

Morphology edit

 
Chalepogenus herbsti (Herbst's Mini-Oil Digger).

Bees belonging to the genus Chalepogenus are relatively small compared to honey bees; their body size ranges from 4.2 to 10.0 millimetres.[7][8] Chalepogenus species are hairy and exhibit diverse colouration, with some having a black integument (e.g. C. cocuccii), and others displaying yellow markings on their head, thorax, legs, or metasoma (e.g. C. herbsti). Additionally, certain species exhibit red colouring on their legs or metasoma (e.g. C. rufipes), while others have bluish metallic reflections (e.g. C. caeruleus).[7]

Oil-collecting structures edit

The oil-collecting structures (pad and comb) of Chalepogenus bees are covered by setae and are located on the posterior surface of the forebasitarsus.[2][9] The bees exhibit interspecific variation based on the flower type they forage:

  • Some Chalepogenus species (e.g. C. rufipes) forage on flowers possessing trichome elaiophores. To do so, they reach the floral oil with their forelegs, making their bulging pad soaked.[3][4][7][10]
  • Other Chalepogenus species (e.g. C. cocuccii) collect oil from flowers that possess epithelial elaiophores, by sweeping floral oil with their compound comb of setae. These species have a non-bulging pad.[3][4][10]

Pollination edit

Chalepogenus oil-collecting bees pollinate plant species belonging to the families Calceolariaceae, Iridaceae and Solanaceae.

Calceolariaceae edit

 
Chalepogenus rufipes (Red-legged Mini-Oil Digger) visiting a Calceolaria flower.

The family Calceolariaceae is composed of three genera, namely Calceolaria, Jovellana, and Porodittia. Calceolaria is the most successful oil-producing genus present in the Neotropical realm, with 210 oil-producing species.[5] This genus is pollinated by Chalepogenus and Centris oil-collecting bees. These bees, distinguished by their varying sizes and foraging capabilities, visit oil-flowers of different sizes and shapes to collect oil, effectively ensuring pollination for Calceolaria.[2][8][11]

Chalepogenus oil-collecting forage on Calceolaria flowers of small size, with a wide lower lip. It has been speculated that both of these criteria enhance the bees' ability to land and manipulate the flowers.[8][11][12]

A single floral visit extends for a minimum of 30 seconds. Chalepogenus bees initiate their visit by landing on the labellum and search for the flower's opening. Once they have found it, the bees use their heads to push aside the hindmost part of the two anthers, thereby revealing the previously hidden frontal section that contains Calceolaria pollen. The bees become dorsally coated with this pollen during this process; in other words, they pollinate Calceolaria flowers nototribically. As they collect oil with their forelegs, the majority of their bodies remains hidden within the labellum, with only their hindlegs visible from outside. Upon completing their oil collection, the bees back out and ipsilaterally transfer the collected oil from forelegs, to middle legs, then to hindlegs.[2][3][5]

Iridaceae edit

 
Chalepogenus herbsti (Herbst's Mini-Oil Digger) visiting an Iridaceae flower.

The family Iridaceae comprises seven subfamilies, and within the subfamily Iridoideae, there are five tribes. One of these tribes is the Sisyrinchieae, which consists of four genera exclusively found in the Americas: Olsynium, Sisyrinchium, Solenomelus, and Tapeinia. Among Neotropical Iridoideae, the genus Sisyrinchium is the most diverse. Many of its species produce floral oil, which attracts oil-collecting pollinators, such as Chalepogenus bees.[13]

The oil-collecting bees take approximately 1 to 3 seconds to exploit each flower. Upon landing on the perianth, they insert themselves deep into the flower by firmly grasping the horizontal part of the perianth with their middle and hindlegs. As a result, the undersides of the pollinators' head and thorax are in contact with the stamen and stylodia. By doing so, they perform sternotribic pollination, in which ventral regions of the bees become covered by pollen. Although movements of the oil-collecting forelegs may not be visible, it is evident that the bees manipulate the filament column of the flower and collect floral oil.[14]

Solanaceae edit

 
Chalepogenus cocuccii (Cocucci's Mini-Oil Digger) visiting a Nierembergia flower in a vertical bottom-up position.

Within the family Solanaceae, which includes 98 genera, Nierembergia is the sole genus that offers non-volatile oil as a floral reward to pollinators, which are oil-collecting bees primarily belonging to the genera Tapinotaspis, Centris, and Chalepogenus. Chalepogenus bee species exhibit distinctive foraging behaviours by actively collecting both oil and pollen, in contrast to Tapinotaspis and Centris bees, which exclusively collect floral oil.[1][15]

During the oil collection process, the oil-collecting bees land on the corolla limb and circle around the central fertile column to collect oil using their forelegs. This results in nototribic pollination, which is the deposition of pollen on oil-collectors’ heads.[15] In contrast, when Chalepogenus bee species collect pollen, they climb to the top of the central fertile column, and secure their grip just below the anthers using their mandibles. In a vertical, bottom-up posture, the bees collect pollen with their forelegs, and transfer it to the scopas located on their hindlegs. This specific positioning above the floral fertile parts leads to sternotribic pollination, which is characterised by the deposition of pollen from the anthers onto various ventral body regions of the pollinator, including the abdomen and legs. Therefore, by exhibiting both nototribic and sternotribic pollination, Chalepogenus bee species enhance the probability of effective pollination for Nierembergia species.[15]

Taxonomy edit

In the Neotropical realm, there are three tribes of oil-collecting bees, namely Tapinotaspidini, Centridini, and Tetrapediini. The genus Chalepogenus belongs to the tribe Tapinotaspidini and is composed of 21 species:[3]

  • C. bicellularis
  • C. caeruleus
  • C. calceolariae
  • C. clypeolatus
  • C. cocuccii
  • C. crassifasciatus
  • C. goeldianus
  • C. herbsti
  • C. luciane
  • C. muelleri
  • C. neffi
  • C. nigripes
  • C. parvus
  • C. perimelaena
  • C. rasmusseni
  • C. roitmani
  • C. rozeni
  • C. rufipes
  • C. subcaeruleus
  • C. unicolor
  • C. vogeli

References edit

  1. ^ a b Maubecin, C. C.; Boero, L.; Sérsic, A. N. (2020). "Specialisation in pollen collection, pollination interactions and phenotypic variation of the oil-collecting bee Chalepogenus cocuccii". Apidologie. 51 (5): 710–723. doi:10.1007/s13592-020-00755-4. hdl:11336/106706. ISSN 0044-8435.
  2. ^ a b c d Murúa, M. (2020). "Different Pollinators' Functional Traits Can Explain Pollen Load in Two Solitary Oil-Collecting Bees". Insects. 11 (10): 685. doi:10.3390/insects11100685. ISSN 2075-4450. PMC 7599834.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cocucci, A. A.; Sérsic, A.; Roig-Alsina, A. (2000). "Oil-collecting structures in Tapinotaspidini: their diversity, function and probable origin". Mitt. Münch. Ent. Ges. 90: 51–74.
  4. ^ a b c Neff, J. L.; Simpson, B. B. (2017). "Vogel's great legacy: The oil flower and oil-collecting bee syndrome". Flora. 232: 104–116. doi:10.1016/j.flora.2017.01.003. ISSN 0367-2530.
  5. ^ a b c d Rasmussen, C.; Olesen, J. M. (2000). "Oil flowers and oil-collecting bees". Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology honours Knut Foegri. 39 (23–31).
  6. ^ Torretta, J. P.; Marrero, H. J.; Roig-Alsina, A. H. (2011). "Chalepogenus roitmani Roig Alsina (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Tapinotaspidini): description of the male and new geographical records for the species". Zootaxa. 2797: 21–24. ISSN 1175-5326.
  7. ^ a b c Roig-Alsina, A. (1997). "A generic study of the bees of the tribe Tapinotaspidini, with notes on the evolution of their oil-collecting structures". Mitt. Münch. Ent. Ges. 87: 3–21.
  8. ^ a b c Weber, U. K.; Nuismer, S. L.; Espíndola, A. (2019). "Patterns of floral morphology in relation to climate and floral visitors". Annals of Botany. 125 (3): 433–445. doi:10.1093/aob/mcz172. ISSN 0305-7364. PMC 7061174.
  9. ^ Neff, J. L.; Simpson, B. B. (1981). "Oil-Collecting Structures in the Anthophoridae (Hymenoptera): Morphology, Function, and Use in Systematics". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. 54 (1): 95–123. ISSN 0022-8567.
  10. ^ a b Possobom, C. C. F.; Machado, S. R. (2017). "Elaiophores: their taxonomic distribution, morphology and functions". Acta Botanica Brasilica. 31: 503–524. doi:10.1590/0102-33062017abb0088. hdl:1843/47821. ISSN 0102-3306.
  11. ^ a b Murúa, M.; Espíndola, A.; González, A.; Medel, R. (2017). "Pollinators and crossability as reproductive isolation barriers in two sympatric oil-rewarding Calceolaria (Calceolariaceae) species". Evolutionary Ecology. 31 (4): 421–434. doi:10.1007/s10682-017-9894-3. ISSN 0269-7653.
  12. ^ Murúa, M.; Espíndola, A. (2014). "Pollination syndromes in a specialised plant‐pollinator interaction: does floral morphology predict pollinators in <scp>C</scp>alceolaria?". Plant Biology. 17 (2): 551–557. doi:10.1111/plb.12225. ISSN 1435-8603.
  13. ^ Silvério, A.; Nadot, S.; Souza-Chies, T. T.; Chauveau, O. (2012). "Floral rewards in the tribe Sisyrinchieae (Iridaceae): oil as an alternative to pollen and nectar?". Sexual Plant Reproduction. 25 (4): 267–279. doi:10.1007/s00497-012-0196-1. ISSN 0934-0882.
  14. ^ Cocucci, A. A.; Vogel, S. (2001). "Oil-producing flowers of Sisyrinchium species (Iridaceae) and their pollinators in southern South America". Flora. 196 (1): 26–46. doi:10.1016/s0367-2530(17)30010-5. hdl:11336/38528. ISSN 0367-2530.
  15. ^ a b c Maubecin, C. C.; Rocamundi, N.; Palombo, N.; Aguirre, L. A.; Cocucci, A. A.; Sérsic, A. N. (2021). "Teasing out the functional groups of oil-collecting bees in the light of the pollination of Nierembergia flowers". Arthropod-Plant Interactions. 15 (5): 809–819. doi:10.1007/s11829-021-09864-y. ISSN 1872-8855.

chalepogenus, genus, consisting, species, solitary, collecting, apid, bees, demonstrates, oligolecty, foraging, producing, flowers, from, families, calceolariaceae, iridaceae, solanaceae, these, flowers, abundant, south, america, where, endemic, contrast, hone. The genus Chalepogenus consisting of 21 species of solitary oil collecting apid bees demonstrates oligolecty by foraging on oil producing flowers from the families Calceolariaceae Iridaceae and Solanaceae 1 2 3 These oil flowers are abundant in South America where Chalepogenus is endemic 4 In contrast to honey bees Chalepogenus species do not collect nectar instead they gather floral oil for various purposes including provisioning their larvae constructing nests and sustaining foraging adult bees 5 Although oil collection has been reported to be performed by females only both males and females have specialised oil collecting structures 5 ChalepogenusChalepogenus herbsti visiting Sisyrinchium striatumScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder HymenopteraFamily ApidaeTribe TapinotaspidiniGenus ChalepogenusObservations of Chalepogenus from iNaturalist as of October 2023 Contents 1 Distribution 2 Morphology 2 1 Oil collecting structures 3 Pollination 3 1 Calceolariaceae 3 2 Iridaceae 3 3 Solanaceae 4 Taxonomy 5 ReferencesDistribution editSpecies of Chalepogenus are restricted to South America 6 Morphology edit nbsp Chalepogenus herbsti Herbst s Mini Oil Digger Bees belonging to the genus Chalepogenus are relatively small compared to honey bees their body size ranges from 4 2 to 10 0 millimetres 7 8 Chalepogenus species are hairy and exhibit diverse colouration with some having a black integument e g C cocuccii and others displaying yellow markings on their head thorax legs or metasoma e g C herbsti Additionally certain species exhibit red colouring on their legs or metasoma e g C rufipes while others have bluish metallic reflections e g C caeruleus 7 Oil collecting structures edit The oil collecting structures pad and comb of Chalepogenus bees are covered by setae and are located on the posterior surface of the forebasitarsus 2 9 The bees exhibit interspecific variation based on the flower type they forage Some Chalepogenus species e g C rufipes forage on flowers possessing trichome elaiophores To do so they reach the floral oil with their forelegs making their bulging pad soaked 3 4 7 10 Other Chalepogenus species e g C cocuccii collect oil from flowers that possess epithelial elaiophores by sweeping floral oil with their compound comb of setae These species have a non bulging pad 3 4 10 Pollination editChalepogenus oil collecting bees pollinate plant species belonging to the families Calceolariaceae Iridaceae and Solanaceae Calceolariaceae edit nbsp Chalepogenus rufipes Red legged Mini Oil Digger visiting a Calceolaria flower The family Calceolariaceae is composed of three genera namely Calceolaria Jovellana and Porodittia Calceolaria is the most successful oil producing genus present in the Neotropical realm with 210 oil producing species 5 This genus is pollinated by Chalepogenus and Centris oil collecting bees These bees distinguished by their varying sizes and foraging capabilities visit oil flowers of different sizes and shapes to collect oil effectively ensuring pollination for Calceolaria 2 8 11 Chalepogenus oil collecting forage on Calceolaria flowers of small size with a wide lower lip It has been speculated that both of these criteria enhance the bees ability to land and manipulate the flowers 8 11 12 A single floral visit extends for a minimum of 30 seconds Chalepogenus bees initiate their visit by landing on the labellum and search for the flower s opening Once they have found it the bees use their heads to push aside the hindmost part of the two anthers thereby revealing the previously hidden frontal section that contains Calceolaria pollen The bees become dorsally coated with this pollen during this process in other words they pollinate Calceolaria flowers nototribically As they collect oil with their forelegs the majority of their bodies remains hidden within the labellum with only their hindlegs visible from outside Upon completing their oil collection the bees back out and ipsilaterally transfer the collected oil from forelegs to middle legs then to hindlegs 2 3 5 Iridaceae edit nbsp Chalepogenus herbsti Herbst s Mini Oil Digger visiting an Iridaceae flower The family Iridaceae comprises seven subfamilies and within the subfamily Iridoideae there are five tribes One of these tribes is the Sisyrinchieae which consists of four genera exclusively found in the Americas Olsynium Sisyrinchium Solenomelus and Tapeinia Among Neotropical Iridoideae the genus Sisyrinchium is the most diverse Many of its species produce floral oil which attracts oil collecting pollinators such as Chalepogenus bees 13 The oil collecting bees take approximately 1 to 3 seconds to exploit each flower Upon landing on the perianth they insert themselves deep into the flower by firmly grasping the horizontal part of the perianth with their middle and hindlegs As a result the undersides of the pollinators head and thorax are in contact with the stamen and stylodia By doing so they perform sternotribic pollination in which ventral regions of the bees become covered by pollen Although movements of the oil collecting forelegs may not be visible it is evident that the bees manipulate the filament column of the flower and collect floral oil 14 Solanaceae edit nbsp Chalepogenus cocuccii Cocucci s Mini Oil Digger visiting a Nierembergia flower in a vertical bottom up position Within the family Solanaceae which includes 98 genera Nierembergia is the sole genus that offers non volatile oil as a floral reward to pollinators which are oil collecting bees primarily belonging to the genera Tapinotaspis Centris and Chalepogenus Chalepogenus bee species exhibit distinctive foraging behaviours by actively collecting both oil and pollen in contrast to Tapinotaspis and Centris bees which exclusively collect floral oil 1 15 During the oil collection process the oil collecting bees land on the corolla limb and circle around the central fertile column to collect oil using their forelegs This results in nototribic pollination which is the deposition of pollen on oil collectors heads 15 In contrast when Chalepogenus bee species collect pollen they climb to the top of the central fertile column and secure their grip just below the anthers using their mandibles In a vertical bottom up posture the bees collect pollen with their forelegs and transfer it to the scopas located on their hindlegs This specific positioning above the floral fertile parts leads to sternotribic pollination which is characterised by the deposition of pollen from the anthers onto various ventral body regions of the pollinator including the abdomen and legs Therefore by exhibiting both nototribic and sternotribic pollination Chalepogenus bee species enhance the probability of effective pollination for Nierembergia species 15 Taxonomy editIn the Neotropical realm there are three tribes of oil collecting bees namely Tapinotaspidini Centridini and Tetrapediini The genus Chalepogenus belongs to the tribe Tapinotaspidini and is composed of 21 species 3 C bicellularis C caeruleus C calceolariae C clypeolatus C cocuccii C crassifasciatus C goeldianus C herbsti C luciane C muelleri C neffi C nigripes C parvus C perimelaena C rasmusseni C roitmani C rozeni C rufipes C subcaeruleus C unicolor C vogeliReferences edit a b Maubecin C C Boero L Sersic A N 2020 Specialisation in pollen collection pollination interactions and phenotypic variation of the oil collecting bee Chalepogenus cocuccii Apidologie 51 5 710 723 doi 10 1007 s13592 020 00755 4 hdl 11336 106706 ISSN 0044 8435 a b c d Murua M 2020 Different Pollinators Functional Traits Can Explain Pollen Load in Two Solitary Oil Collecting Bees Insects 11 10 685 doi 10 3390 insects11100685 ISSN 2075 4450 PMC 7599834 a b c d e Cocucci A A Sersic A Roig Alsina A 2000 Oil collecting structures in Tapinotaspidini their diversity function and probable origin Mitt Munch Ent Ges 90 51 74 a b c Neff J L Simpson B B 2017 Vogel s great legacy The oil flower and oil collecting bee syndrome Flora 232 104 116 doi 10 1016 j flora 2017 01 003 ISSN 0367 2530 a b c d Rasmussen C Olesen J M 2000 Oil flowers and oil collecting bees Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology honours Knut Foegri 39 23 31 Torretta J P Marrero H J Roig Alsina A H 2011 Chalepogenus roitmani Roig Alsina Hymenoptera Apidae Tapinotaspidini description of the male and new geographical records for the species Zootaxa 2797 21 24 ISSN 1175 5326 a b c Roig Alsina A 1997 A generic study of the bees of the tribe Tapinotaspidini with notes on the evolution of their oil collecting structures Mitt Munch Ent Ges 87 3 21 a b c Weber U K Nuismer S L Espindola A 2019 Patterns of floral morphology in relation to climate and floral visitors Annals of Botany 125 3 433 445 doi 10 1093 aob mcz172 ISSN 0305 7364 PMC 7061174 Neff J L Simpson B B 1981 Oil Collecting Structures in the Anthophoridae Hymenoptera Morphology Function and Use in Systematics Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 54 1 95 123 ISSN 0022 8567 a b Possobom C C F Machado S R 2017 Elaiophores their taxonomic distribution morphology and functions Acta Botanica Brasilica 31 503 524 doi 10 1590 0102 33062017abb0088 hdl 1843 47821 ISSN 0102 3306 a b Murua M Espindola A Gonzalez A Medel R 2017 Pollinators and crossability as reproductive isolation barriers in two sympatric oil rewarding Calceolaria Calceolariaceae species Evolutionary Ecology 31 4 421 434 doi 10 1007 s10682 017 9894 3 ISSN 0269 7653 Murua M Espindola A 2014 Pollination syndromes in a specialised plant pollinator interaction does floral morphology predict pollinators in lt scp gt C lt scp gt alceolaria Plant Biology 17 2 551 557 doi 10 1111 plb 12225 ISSN 1435 8603 Silverio A Nadot S Souza Chies T T Chauveau O 2012 Floral rewards in the tribe Sisyrinchieae Iridaceae oil as an alternative to pollen and nectar Sexual Plant Reproduction 25 4 267 279 doi 10 1007 s00497 012 0196 1 ISSN 0934 0882 Cocucci A A Vogel S 2001 Oil producing flowers of Sisyrinchium species Iridaceae and their pollinators in southern South America Flora 196 1 26 46 doi 10 1016 s0367 2530 17 30010 5 hdl 11336 38528 ISSN 0367 2530 a b c Maubecin C C Rocamundi N Palombo N Aguirre L A Cocucci A A Sersic A N 2021 Teasing out the functional groups of oil collecting bees in the light of the pollination of Nierembergia flowers Arthropod Plant Interactions 15 5 809 819 doi 10 1007 s11829 021 09864 y ISSN 1872 8855 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chalepogenus amp oldid 1197958478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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