4.2 Article

Functional Traits in Bees: the Role of Body Size and Hairs in the Pollination of a Passiflora Crop

Journal

NEOTROPICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC BRASIL
DOI: 10.1007/s13744-023-01058-w

Keywords

Apidae; Body size; Hairiness; Sweet granadilla; Pollen; Pollination

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Pollination is crucial for food and nutritional security, and its different functional traits in insects remain poorly understood. This study investigates the relationship between insect functional traits and pollen transport in sweet granadilla crops. Bees were the most abundant insects and carried the highest amounts of pollen, with exotic honeybees being the most common species but carrying less pollen than native bees. Large-bodied native bees, such as Bombus hortulanus, carried more sweet granadilla pollen despite their low abundance. Body size was the most important trait influencing pollen transport, while traits related to body hairs had no significant effect.
Pollination is a vitally important function in nature and becomes an ecosystem service because it influences the food and nutritional security for people. However, the contribution of different functional traits of insects for pollen transport of plants is still poorly known. We explore the relationship between pollinator insect functional traits and the transport of pollen of sweet granadilla (Passiflora ligularis Juss) in eight crops. We sampled flower-visiting insects of this crop and recorded 10 functional traits (five by direct measurements and five from the literature) that were related to the amount of pollen carried by each insect. Bees (Apidae) were not only the most abundant insects but also the ones that loaded the highest amounts of pollen. Within these, the most abundant species was the exotic common honeybee (Apis mellifera (Linnaeus)) making up almost half of the specimens collected; however, this bee carried less pollen grains than other native bees. Bombus hortulanus (Smith) was one of the large-bodied native bees that carried more sweet granadilla pollen, despite not being an abundant species in the community. Body size was the most important trait determining the transport of sweet granadilla pollen, while the traits related to body hairs were not significant for the body's pollen load. None of the functional traits evaluated was influenced by taxonomy at species-level. Our results suggest that large body sizes in bees are the most important traits in granadilla pollen transport, regardless of other changes in composition and structure of pollinating insect assemblages in the crop.

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