Abstract

Cuckoo bumblebees are a monophyletic group within the genus Bombus and social parasites of free-living bumblebees, upon which they rely to rear their offspring. Cuckoo bumblebees lack the worker caste and visit flowers primarily for their own sustenance and do not collect pollen. Although different flower-visiting behaviours can be expected between cuckoo and free-living bumblebees due to different biological constraints, no study has yet quantified such differences. Here, we provide the first empirical evidence of different flower-visiting behaviours between cuckoo and free-living bumblebees. We recorded the flower-visiting behaviour of 350 individual bumblebees over two years in a wild population of the entomophilous plant Gentiana lutea, of which they are among the main pollinators. In cuckoo bumblebees (28.9% of the total), we only found males, while we found both workers and males in free-living bumblebees. Cuckoo bumblebees visited significantly more flowers for longer time periods than both free-living bumblebee workers and males within whorls, while differences at the whole-plant level were less marked. Free-living bumblebee males visited more flowers and performed slightly longer flower visits than workers. Behavioural differences between cuckoo male bumblebees and free-living bumblebee workers are likely related to different foraging needs, while differences between cuckoo and free-living bumblebee males may be caused by differences in colony development and a delayed mating period of free-living bumblebees. The longer visits made by cuckoo male bumblebees will likely negatively affect plant reproductive success through increased within-plant pollen flow.

Highlights

  • Bumblebees are primitively eusocial bees with an annual life cycle usually divided into three distinct phases

  • We only found cuckoo bumblebee males, and workers were more frequent than males in free-living bumblebees

  • We provide the first empirical evidence of slower and significantly longer flower visits performed by cuckoo bumblebees compared to free-living bumblebees

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Summary

Introduction

Bumblebees are primitively eusocial bees with an annual life cycle usually divided into three distinct phases. As in other groups of social insects, social parasitism has evolved in several species of bumblebees, called cuckoo bumblebees (Lhomme & Hines 2019). There are currently 27 species of cuckoo bumblebees (subgenus Psithyrus) recognized worldwide (Lhomme et al 2021). These species completely lack the worker caste (i.e., all the female individuals are fertile females) and do not have specialized structures on the hind legs (i.e., corbiculae) to collect pollen to feed their larvae. Females of cuckoo bumblebees usurp the nests of host social bumblebees (hereafter referred to as free-living bumblebees) almost always killing the host queen to force the host workers to rear their offspring (Fisher 1987)

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