Abstract

During the nesting season, adult females of the solitary bee Megachile rotundata (F.) face considerable physical and energy demands that could include increasing wear and tear on their bodies and decreasing lipid reserves. Consequently, their reproductive performance may be affected not only by extrinsic factors (e.g., weather and floral resource availability), but intrinsic changes in their own bodies. Because of the potential fitness effects of seasonal changes in body condition, our objectives were to determine how wing wear, lipid reserves, and oocyte sizes vary during nesting seasons, beginning when females emerge as adults. As nesting progressed, females in two populations experienced a steady increase in wing wear, which is known to reduce foraging efficiency and increase risk of mortality in other bees. Soon after emergence, females exhibited sharp declines in lipid content which remained low for the remainder of the season. Newly-emerged females ingested pollen, an activity known to be correlated with the initiation of egg maturation in this species. Additionally, the early summer drop in lipid stores was correlated with an increase in the size of the oocytes carried. However, by ∼6 weeks after emergence, oocytes began to decrease in length and volume, perhaps due to nutrient deficiencies related to loss of stored lipids. Our results suggest management of M. rotundata should include rearing bees at temperatures that maximize stored lipid reserves in adults and timing bee release so that significant pollen resources are available for both adults and offspring.

Highlights

  • The nesting season of the leafcutting bee Megachile rotundata (F.) (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) is a period of intense physical activity, each female acting on her own to modify and provision a nest cavity (Pitts-Singer & Cane, 2011)

  • Given the potential fitness effects of seasonal changes in female body condition, the objectives of this study were to determine how wing wear, body lipid reserves, and oocyte sizes vary across nesting seasons, beginning at the time when females appear as adults

  • Seasonal trends in wing wear Tattering of the forewings of M. rotundata occurs mainly along the apical margins where they are unsupported by bordering wing veins beyond the distal terminus of the costal vein

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Summary

Introduction

The nesting season of the leafcutting bee Megachile rotundata (F.) (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) is a period of intense physical activity, each female acting on her own to modify and provision a nest cavity (Pitts-Singer & Cane, 2011). During this time, females experience considerable energy demands and physical stresses from the large number of flights taken to collect pollen, nectar, and nesting materials. Soon after emerging as adults, females begin to produce relatively large eggs (Richards, 1994), as is the case in other solitary, nest-provisioning Hymenoptera (Iwata, 1955; Iwata, 1960; O’Neill, 2001). It is of interest to determine whether the condition of adult females changes seasonally, in ways that could affect the consistency of their performance as pollinators and as parents of the generation of bees that will be released during the following year’s growing season

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