Phylogenomic analysis of Apoidea sheds new light on the sister group of bees.
Manuela SannOliver NiehuisRalph S PetersChristoph MayerAlexey KozlovLars PodsiadlowskiSarah BankKaren MeusemannBernhard MisofChristoph BleidornMichael OhlPublished in: BMC evolutionary biology (2018)
By combining transcriptomic sequences with those obtained via target DNA enrichment, we were able to include an unprecedented large number of apoid wasps in a phylogenetic study for tracing the phylogenetic origin of bees. Our results confirm the polyphyletic nature of the former wasp family Crabonidae, which we here suggest splitting into eight families. Of these, the family Ammoplanidae possibly represents the extant sister lineage of bees. Species of Ammoplanidae are known to hunt thrips, of which some aggregate on flowers and feed on pollen. The specific biology of Ammoplanidae as predators indicates how the transition from a predatory to pollen-collecting life style could have taken place in the evolution of bees. This insight plus the finding that (eu)social societies evolved exclusively in a single subordinated lineage of apoid wasps provides new perspectives for future comparative studies.