Bees And Flower Oil – Information On Oil Collecting Bees

Bees
collect pollen and nectar from flowers for food to feed the colony, right? Not
always. How about oil collecting bees? Never heard of bees that collect oil?
Well you’re in luck. The following article contains information about the
little known relationship between bees and flower oil.

What are Oil Bees?

Oil collecting bees have a symbiotic relationship with
floral oil producing plants. First discovered over 40 years ago by Stefan
Vogel, this mutualism has evolved through various adaptations. Over the course
of history, floral oil production and oil collecting on the part of certain
species of bees has waxed and waned.

There are 447 species of apid bees that collect oil from
about 2,000 species of angiosperms, wetland plants that reproduce both sexually
and asexually. Oil collecting behavior is characteristic of species in the
genera Centris, Epicharis, Tetrapedia, Ctenoplectra, Macropis, Rediviva, and Tapinotaspidini.

Relationship between Bees and Flower Oil

Oil flowers produce oil from secretory glands, or
elaiophores. This oil is then collected by oil collecting bees. The females use
the oil for food for their larvae and to line their nests. The males collect
oil for an as yet unknown purpose.

Oil bees collect and transport the oil on their legs or
abdomen. Their legs are often disproportionately long so they can reach down
into the lengthy spurs of the oil producing flowers. They are also covered with
a dense area of velvety hairs that have evolved to facilitate the collection of
the oil.

Once the oil is collected, it is rubbed into a ball and fed
to the larvae or used to line the sides of the underground nest.

In most cases of floral diversity, it is the flowers that
have adapted to their pollinators in order to be able to reproduce, but in the
case of oil collecting bees, it is the bees that have adapted.

This article was last updated on 09/17/21
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Bees
collect pollen and nectar from flowers for food to feed the colony, right? Not
always. How about oil collecting bees? Never heard of bees that collect oil?
Well you’re in luck. The following article contains information about the
little known relationship between bees and flower oil.

What are Oil Bees?

Oil collecting bees have a symbiotic relationship with
floral oil producing plants. First discovered over 40 years ago by Stefan
Vogel, this mutualism has evolved through various adaptations. Over the course
of history, floral oil production and oil collecting on the part of certain
species of bees has waxed and waned.

There are 447 species of apid bees that collect oil from
about 2,000 species of angiosperms, wetland plants that reproduce both sexually
and asexually. Oil collecting behavior is characteristic of species in the
genera Centris, Epicharis, Tetrapedia, Ctenoplectra, Macropis, Rediviva, and Tapinotaspidini.

Relationship between Bees and Flower Oil

Oil flowers produce oil from secretory glands, or
elaiophores. This oil is then collected by oil collecting bees. The females use
the oil for food for their larvae and to line their nests. The males collect
oil for an as yet unknown purpose.

Oil bees collect and transport the oil on their legs or
abdomen. Their legs are often disproportionately long so they can reach down
into the lengthy spurs of the oil producing flowers. They are also covered with
a dense area of velvety hairs that have evolved to facilitate the collection of
the oil.

Once the oil is collected, it is rubbed into a ball and fed
to the larvae or used to line the sides of the underground nest.

In most cases of floral diversity, it is the flowers that
have adapted to their pollinators in order to be able to reproduce, but in the
case of oil collecting bees, it is the bees that have adapted.

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