Networks and dominance hierarchies: does interspecific aggression explain flower partitioning among stingless bees?

被引:17
作者
Dworschak, Kai [1 ]
Bluethgen, Nico [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Anim Ecol & Trop Biol, Biozentrum, D-97074 Wurzburg, Germany
关键词
Apidae; asymmetric competition; ecological networks; foraging behaviour; Meliponini; resource partitioning; stingless bees; Trigona; NESTMATE RECOGNITION; FORAGING BEHAVIOR; MELIPONA; NECTAR; APIDAE; HYMENOPTERA; COMPETITION; POLLEN; ANTS; SPECIALIZATION;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2311.2010.01174.x
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
2. In order to determine the competitive dominance hierarchy and its effect on flower partitioning in a local stingless bee community in Borneo, interspecific aggressions were tested among eight species in arena experiments. 3. All species tested were strongly mutually aggressive in the arena, and the observed interactions were often lethal for one or both opponents. Aggression significantly increased with body size differences between fighting pairs and was asymmetric: larger aggressors were superior over smaller species. Additional aggression tests involved dummies with surface extracts, and results suggest that species- and colony-specific surface profiles are important in triggering the aggressive behaviour. 4. Sixteen stingless bee species were observed foraging on 41 species of flowering plants. The resulting bee-flower interaction network showed a high degree of generalisation (network-level specialisation H-2' = 0.11), corresponding to a random, opportunistic distribution of bee species among available flower species. 5. Aggressions on flowers were rare and only occurred at a low level. The dominance hierarchy obtained in the arena experiments did not correlate significantly with plant quality, estimated as the number of flowers per plant or as total bee visitation rate. 6. Our findings suggest that asymmetries in interference competition do not necessarily translate into actual resource partitioning in the context of complex interacting communities.
引用
收藏
页码:216 / 225
页数:10
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