Hydrocarbon Footprints as a Record of Bumblebee Flower Visitation

被引:0
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作者
Sebastian Witjes
Thomas Eltz
机构
[1] University of Düsseldorf,Department of Neurobiology, Sensory Ecology Group
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关键词
Cuticular hydrocarbons; Cuticular lipids; Footprints; Scent-marks; Flower visit; Pollination; Pollinator decline;
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摘要
Bumblebees leave traces of cuticular hydrocarbons on flowers they visit, with the amount deposited being positively related to the number of visits. We asked whether such footprint hydrocarbons are retained on flowers for sufficiently long periods of time so as to reflect bee visitation in pollination studies. In laboratory experiments, flower corollae (Primula veris, Digitalis grandiflora) visited by Bombus terrestris workers retained bee-derived nonacosenes (C29H58) in near-unchanged quantities for 24 hours, both at 15 and 25°C. Additionally, synthetic (Z)-9-tricosene applied to flower corollae of the deadnettle Lamium maculatum was retained for 48 hours in an unchanged quantity. In a field survey, the amount of footprint alkenes on flowers of comfrey (Symphytum officinale) plants was positively correlated with the number of bumblebee visits that those plants had received during the day. Together, these data suggest that flowers retain a long-term quantitative record of bumblebee visitation. The analysis of petal extracts by gas chromatography could provide a cheap and reliable way of quantifying bumblebee visits in landscape scale studies of pollination.
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页码:1320 / 1325
页数:5
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