← Back to DatasetsDataset

Data from: Asteraceae pollen provisions protect Osmia mason bees (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) from brood parasitism

Creators: Spear, Dakota M., Silverman, Sarah, Forrest, Jessica R. K.
Year: 2016
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.4sd09
License: CC0 (Public Domain)
Location: Colorado
Publisher: Dryad
Tags: Selection: natural, Ecology: community, Evolution: host/parasite, Wasps, Apoidea, Interactions: host/parasite, Sapyga, Sapygidae, Flowering & Pollination, Insect Ecology, Gunnison Basin

Description

Many specialist herbivores eat foods that are apparently low quality. The compensatory benefits of a poor diet may include protection from natural enemies. Several bee lineages specialize on pollen of the plant family Asteraceae, which is known to be a poor-quality food. Here we tested the hypothesis that specialization on Asteraceae pollen protects bees from parasitism. We compared rates of brood parasitism by Sapyga wasps on Asteraceae-specialist, Fabeae-specialist, and other species of Osmia bees in the field over several years and sites and found that Asteraceae-specialist species were parasitized significantly less frequently than other species. We then tested the effect of Asteraceae pollen on parasites by raising Sapyga larvae on three pollen mixtures: Asteraceae, Fabeae, and generalist (a mix of primarily non-Asteraceae pollens). Survival of parasite larvae was significantly reduced on Asteraceae provisions. Our results suggest that specialization on low-quality pollen may evolve because it helps protect bees from natural enemies.

Local Knowledge Graph (8 entities)

Loading graph...

Cited 1 times