Foraging behaviour and niche differentiation in two South Asian bee species
Nevard, Lucy
Date: 18 September 2017
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
MbyRes in Psychology
Abstract
Pollination across the tropics, including in South Asia, is dominated by
social bees. I investigated the behaviour of two species: Apis cerana (Eastern
honeybee) and Tetragonula iridipennis (Indian stingless bee) which co-exist in
the same environment. The behaviour of these pollinators is somewhat
understudied, and this work ...
Pollination across the tropics, including in South Asia, is dominated by
social bees. I investigated the behaviour of two species: Apis cerana (Eastern
honeybee) and Tetragonula iridipennis (Indian stingless bee) which co-exist in
the same environment. The behaviour of these pollinators is somewhat
understudied, and this work aims to fill some of the gaps in our knowledge
Given the differences in size, colony organisation, and recruitment strategies, I
hypothesised that there may be niche partitioning, perhaps mediated by spatial
or temporal distribution. I analysed pollen from both species to assess their use
of plant resources and found that the two species used different sources, and
this is context-dependent. I performed an artificial feeder experiment to
investigate the foraging distance of each species. The results indicate that
A.cerana has a longer foraging range than T. iridipennis and may be a more
efficient forager. Finally, I recorded the daily activity patterns of both species,
which show similarities in general foraging activity. However, the results also
show that the species may have different temporal patterns with regard to
pollen foraging. Temperature also influences activity and pollen foraging in A.
cerana but not in T. iridipennis. These behavioural differences may be
mediating niche differentiation between the two species.
MbyRes Dissertations
Doctoral College
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