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Natural history of Centris (Paracentris) burgdorfi Friese, 1901 (Apidae, Centridini)

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Author(s):
William de Oliveira Sabino
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Isabel Alves dos Santos; Maria Cristina Gaglianone; Celso Feitosa Martins; Clemens Peter Schlindwein
Advisor: Isabel Alves dos Santos; Cláudia Inês da Silva
Abstract

In the present thesis, I studied the biology of Centris (Paracentris) burgdorfi, a solitary bee of wide distribution in Brazil. The only nesting site known is in a dune area in northeastern Brazil, 25 km from the city of Natal. In this place, the females nest exclusively in petrified dunes about 1 km from the sea. I studied the mating system of the species, where I could verify that the high competition by females near the nest forces the male to carry the female to another place to mate. No female was seen mating more than once and, soon after copulation, the female begins to construct the nest. The nest consists of a shallow tunnel with access to the brood cells. I evaluated the number of trips that the female made to the collection of oil and pollen and the time spent in each action within the nest (depositions of pollen, oil, oviposition and operculation). During the period of construction of the cells the females do not sleep inside the nest, but in branches of Krameria tomentosa, the plant used as source of oil. In order to increase our knowledge about the species, I searched for other populations in Brazil so that I could evaluate the trophic niche. I used pollen found in the body of females to infer about the partial diet of adults and immature. In addition to the dune area in the Northeast, I found C. burgdorfi in the tropical Savanna (Cerrado) in Cavalcante, state of Goiás and in high altitude field areas, in Ponta Grossa, state of Paraná. Through pollen analysis, I verified the importance of plants of the genus Chamaecrista as a source of pollen, being this one of the few genera shared among the three sites. Krameria grandiflora was the source of oil in Cavalcante and in the Natal, and Angelonia integerrima, was the source of oil in the Ponta Grossa. This reveals the trophic niche amplitude in C. burgdorfi not only in relation to the species of plants used in the diet, but also to the type of elaiophore that the female can access (epithelial and trichromatic). This plasticity makes possible the wide distribution of the species in different phytophysiognomies. Nutritionally I analyzed the diet in the provision of C. burgdorfi offspring from northeastern Brazil and from the breeding cells of Centris (Paracentris) pallida collected in the southwestern United States. Centris pallida is a species of Centridini that has lost the behavior of the oil-collection. Centris burgdorfi has a diet richer in lipids and proteins, and the diet of C. pallida is richer in carbohydrates. The most proteinic diet of C. burgdorfi is due to the presence of Chamaecrista, since plants with poricidal anthers contain more proteins compared to non-poricidal ones, such as C. pallida (Parkinsonia and Olneya) pollen sources (AU)

FAPESP's process: 13/01580-0 - Nesting Ecology of Centris (Paracentris) burgdorfi (Apidae, Centridini).
Grantee:William de Oliveira Sabino
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate