Pollen-collecting by stingless bees on cacao flowers |
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Authors: | A. M. Young |
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Affiliation: | (1) Intertebrate Zoology Section, Milwaukee Public Museum, 53233 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary Stingless bees (Trigona jaty) routinely visit the flowers ofTheobroma cacao (Sterculiaceae) in the Atlantic lowlands of Costa Rica. The bees collect pollen and behave as pollen thieves in flowers well exposed to direct sunlight in cacao plantations, and avoid flowers in heavy shade. Pollination rates are maximized, however, in heavy shade due to the high abundance of the small-bodied pollinating midges (Ceratopogonidae and Cecidomyiidae) found in such places. Pollen-thieving by stingless bees, therefore, may only impact on fruit set in cacao trees in direct sunlight, with only minimal to no impact in areas of cacao where natural pollinator activity is high.This research was funded by grants from The American Cocoa Research Institute of the United States of America. I thank T. Noeske for statistical assistance. |
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Keywords: | Trigona jaty pollination cacao sunlight shade |
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