Abstract

Female and male bees forage for different reasons: females provision nests with pollen appropriate for larval development and consume nectar for energy while males need only fuel their own energetic requirements. The expectation, therefore, is that females should visit fewer floral resource species than males, due to females’ focus on host plant species and their tie to the nest location. We used pollen collected from bees’ bodies and the flowers they were collected on to infer floral resource use in 2010–2012 at Badlands National Park, SD, USA. We collected bees on 24 1-ha plots centered on particular plant species. We compared number of floral species and families (1) associated with individual female and male bees (via generalized linear mixed models) and (2) accumulated by each sex (using rarefaction); and (3) effect of variation between sexes in plant-bee interactions via modularity analyses. Analyses were restricted to bee species with ≥ 5 individuals per sex. Contrary to expectation, female and male bees differed infrequently in the number of floral resources they had visited, both on single foraging bouts and collectively when accumulated across all males and females of a species. When males and females did differ, males visited fewer floral species than females. Generalist and specialist bee species did not differ markedly in floral resource use by females and males. When separated by sex, seven of eleven species occupied different modules than they did when analyzed as a species; most of the bee species were connectors, thus important for stability of the network during perturbations.

Highlights

  • Data used for analyses presented in this paper can be found at Larson et al (2018). (Note that the site naming convention in Larson et al (2018) is different from the one used here: A. barrii = sp-early, E. visheri = sp-mid, E. parryi = sp-late, and C. arvense = wg-mid.)

  • The specialists M. glenwoodensis at E. parryi sites and C. andreniformis at E. visheri sites differed in floral resource accumulation curves: females of both of these species carried and accumulated more floral resource species than did males

  • For a small number of bee species in two distinct habitats, that females and males for the most part forage ; when they do not, females, with few exceptions, visit more floral taxa than males

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Summary

Introduction

Reliance on pollen to provision young and, along with nectar, to meet adult energetic requirements, ensure ongoing plant-bee interactions and plant sexual reproduction. That said, foraging patterns of female bees can be quite different from those of male bees of the same species U.S Geological Survey, St. Paul, MN, USA 2 University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA 3 U.S Geological Survey, Jamestown, ND, USA

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