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HYMENOPTERA, Ctenoplectridae (Apoidea) -- <Images>
& <Juveniles> Description & Statistics
There were 21 species
known as of 2011 of these bulky, medium-sized to small bees. They exist in Africa and tropical and
eastern Asia, south to northern Australia.
Nests are in wood burrows or in old mud nests of wasps. The mentum and lorum is similar to
that of the Melittidae (Finnamore & Michener 1993). Michener & Greenberg (1980) reviewed
the family associations. The tribe
Ctenoplectrini, with two genera, comprises 11 species in tropical Africa, 9
in Asia and one in Australia. Most species collect floral oil, pollen, and
nectar from a few genera of Cucurbitaceae, but three species are thought to
be kleptoparasites. The Ctenoplectrini are characterised by short tongues,
modified scopa and large comb-like tibial spurs adapted to collect and carry
a mixture of floral oils and pollen. The unusual morphology has made it
difficult to infer their closest relatives, in turn preventing an
understanding of these bees’ geographic and temporal origin and had led early
authors to place them in their own family Ctenoplectridae. Recent molecular
phylogenetic analyses find Ctenoplectrini to be monophyletic and closest to
the Long-horned bees, Eucerini. The presumably cleptoparasitic species form a
clade (Ctenoplectrina) that is sister to the remaining species (Ctenoplectra),
confirming the independent evolution of kleptoparasitism in this tribe. Tree
topology and molecular dating together suggest that Ctenoplectrini originated
in Africa in the Early Eocene and that Ctenoplectra dispersed twice
from Africa to Asia, sometime in the Late Eocene, 30–40 million years ago,
from where one species reached the Australian continent via Indonesia and New
Guinea in the mid-Miocene, c. 13 million years ago. Dry and cool mid-Miocene
climates also coincide with the divergence between Ctenoplectra bequaerti
from West Africa and Ctenoplectra terminalis from East and South
Africa, perhaps related to fragmentation of the equatorial African rainforest
belt. Nests are known from few species only, which use existing small holes
in wood and stone or old nests of other bees, which they provision with a
mixture of pollen and floral oil, exclusively gathered from plants of a few
genera of the family Cucurbitaceae = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = References: Please refer to <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
may be found at: MELVYL
Library] Michener, C. D. & L. Greenberg. 1980.
Ctenoplectridae and the origin of long-tongued bees. Zoo. J.
Linne. Soc. 69(3): 183-203 Michener,
C.D. 2000. The
Bees of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press. Stefan
Vogel. 1990. "Ölblumen und
ölsammelnde Bienen. Dritte Folge. Momordica, Thladiantha und die
Ctenoplectridae". Trop. u. Subtrop. Pflanzenwelt 73:1-186. Hanno Schaefer
& S. S. Renner. 2008. "A phylogeny of the oil bee tribe
Ctenoplectrini (Hymenoptera: Anthophila) based on mitochondrial and nuclear
data: Evidence for Early Eocene divergence and repeated out-of-Africa
dispersal". Molecular phylogenetics and Evolution 47(2): 799-811. |
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