A new oil bee pollination mutualism involving male-bee-pollinated orchids was discovered in tropical Asia

Published 2024년 3월 7일

Tridge summary

Researchers have found that many Asian orchid species, particularly those in the Dendrobium genus, offer oil as a reward for pollination, primarily attracting male bees of the Ctenoplectra cornuta species. This is the first time oil-offering orchid flowers have been documented in Asia. The study also revealed that the presence of Cucurbitaceae species, which also offer oil and are favored by female bees, increased the frequency of bee visits to the orchid flowers. This suggests a multipartite oil-flower/oil-bee pollination mutualism and underscores the crucial role of male oil bees in the reproductive success of these orchids, which are declining in tropical Asia.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

It is well known that animal-pollinated plants usually offer nectar or pollen to reward vectors for pollen transfer. While nectar is a kind of sugar water, pollen is protein-rich, a must-need nutrient for bee babies. The honey humans consume is made by female bee workers. Fifty years ago, German scientist Stefan Vogel first identified that droplets are non-water miscible 'nectar' but lipids in some flowering plants, discovering the so-called oil-flower, which offers oil as a reward for female bees.The oil bees collect fat droplets with special setae or abdominal hairs and then mix them with pollen as larval food or use the oil for nest lining. Worldwide, oil rewards are offered by about 150 genera in 11 families whose flowers are exploited by 370 species of oil-collecting bees.To date, our understanding of the ecology and evolution of the oil-bee and oil-flower interactions are mostly from studies in South America and South Africa, although in Asia, since the Early Eocene ...
Source: Phys

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