Journal
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 1234-1240Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2010.01744.x
Keywords
Anchusa; Echium; floral scent and colour; foraging behaviour; foraging naive and experienced; Hoplitis adunca (Megachilidae); multimodal stimuli; specialized solitary bee
Categories
Funding
- Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes
- Landesgraduiertenforderung Baden-Wurttemberg
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P>1. Bees use floral cues, such as odour, colour, size and shape, to discriminate and recognize flowers. The interplay between visual and olfactory cues in social as well as in solitary bee species is poorly understood. 2. In this study we tested the host finding and recognition behaviour in a specialized (oligolectic) bee species, Hoplitis adunca (Megachilidae), which collects pollen exclusively on flowers of Echium (Boraginaceae) species. We determined the importance of visual (especially floral colour) and olfactory cues of Echium vulgare flowers in host-plant finding and recognition, as well as in the discrimination of non-host plants (Anchusa officinalis), by foraging-naive and -experienced H. adunca females. 3. Our investigations showed that the interplay between visual and olfactory cues of E. vulgare flowers is essential for host-plant finding and recognition by H. adunca females. The finding suggests that the blue colour of the flowers attracts the bees, while the olfactory cues, which are Echium-specific, are used by the bees to recognize their host plant and discriminate it from non-host plants. 4. Our results show that different modalities of floral cues need to be studied in a combined approach in order to understand the communication in bee-flower interactions and the cues used by bees to find and recognize their host-plants.
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