Date: March 1, 2017
Source: Pensoft Publishers
Little is known about the nesting
activities of some lineages of megachiline bees. Dr. Sarah Gess, affiliated
with both Albany Museum and Rhodes University, South Africa, and Peter
Roosenschoon, Conservation Officer at the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve,
United Arab Emirates, made use of their earlier observations gathered during a
survey on flower visitation in the spring of 2015, to fill some gaps in the
knowledge of of three species from such lineages.
Among their findings, published
in the open access Journal of Hymenoptera Research, is a curious instance of a
bee attempting to build brood cells using green pieces of plastic. Having
examined two nests of the leafcutter bee species Megachile (Eurymella)
patellimana, they report that one of the females nested in burrows in compacted
sandy ground beneath a plant, and the other -- in the banks of an irrigation
furrow.
However, while the former was
seen carrying a freshly cut leaf, the latter seemed to have discovered a
curious substitute in the form of green plastic. Later on, upon checking the
nest, the researchers found that the phenomenon they had observed was no isolated
incident -- at least six identical pieces of narrow, tough, green plastic were
grouped together in an apparent attempt to construct a cell. It turns out that
the bee had been deliberately cutting off approximately 10-milimetre-long
pieces with its large and strong toothed mandibles, before bringing them back
to the nest.
"Although perhaps
incidentally collected, the novel use of plastics in the nests of bees could
reflect ecologically adaptive traits necessary for survival in an increasingly
human-dominated environment," the authors quote an earlier study.
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