Abstract

A system comprising 2 species of bumblebess (Bombus appositus and Bombus flavifrons) and 2 species of flowers (Delphinium barbeyi and Aconitum columbianum) in Gothic, Colorado, USA, was manipulated to determine whether resource utilization by each bumblebee species was influenced by the presence of the other species of bumblebee. Each bumblebee species concentrated its foraging efforts on a different flower species, apparently choosing the species whose corolla tube length matched its proboscis length most closely. When each bumblebee species was temporarily removed from its preferred flower species, the remaining bumblebee species increased visitation to the other, previously less—utilized, flower species. The remaining bumblebees visited more flowers per stay in the patch, suggesting that they were finding greater amounts of nectar in the absence of other bumblebee species. These removal experiments demonstrated that the bumblebees were sampling flowers frequently enough and were flexible enough in their foraging behavior to respond rapidly to short—term changes in nectar availability. In another area, where its preferred flower species and the other bumblebee species were absent, B. flavifrons foraged actively on the flower species it rarely used in Gothic. This observation and the experiments demonstrate that resource utilization by a bumblebee species is influenced by the presence of other species and suggest that the phenomenon of competitive release can be observed in bumblebees. In this system,interspecific exploitation competition appears to be the primary mechanism involved in resource partitioning.

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