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Preference in flower visits and partitioning in pollen diets of stingless bees in an Asian tropical rain forest
Authors:T. Nagamitsu   Kuniyasu Momose   Tamiji Inoue  David W. Roubik
Affiliation:(1) Hokkaido Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, 7 Hitsujigaoka, Toyohira, Sapporo 062-8516, Japan Tel. +81-11-851-4131 (ext. 246); Fax +81-11-851-4167 e-mail: nagamit@ffpri-hkd.affrc.go.jp, JP;(2) Graduate School for Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan, JP;(3) Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University, Otsu, Japan, JP;(4) Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic Panama, PA
Abstract:Floral resource partitioning among stingless bees (Trigona, Meliponini, Apidae) in a lowland rain forest in Sarawak, Malaysia, was investigated using tree towers and walkways in a 4-year study that included a general flowering period. We obtained 100 collections of insect visitors to flowers of varying floral location and shape representing 81 plant species. The tendency of 11 species of stingless bees to visit specific flowers with a particular floral location and shape was analyzed by logistic regression analysis. This analysis showed that the proportion of flower visitor collections containing Trigona fuscobalteata and T. melanocephala differed according to floral location. The former was frequently collected at canopy and gap flowers, whereas the latter was most often collected at understory flowers. The analysis also suggested that T. erythrogastra was more rarely collected at shallow flowers than at deep flowers. Analysis of the pollen diets of T. collina, T. fuscobalteata, T. melanocephala, and T. melina revealed that similarity of pollen sources differed among the six permutated pairs of the four species. The lowest mean rank of similarity found was between T. fuscobalteata and T. melanocephala. This result supports the hypothesis that preference in visiting flowers in different locations leads to pollen resource partitioning. Received: May 14, 1997 / Accepted: April 23, 1999
Keywords:Flower visitation  Foraging  Pollen preference  Resource partitioning  Sarawak  Trigona
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