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Regional plant abundance explains patterns of host use by pollen-specialist bees in eastern North America.

Colleen SmithSimon JolyCécile AntoineBatoule HyjazieJessica R K Forrest
Published in: Ecology (2023)
Specialist insect herbivores make up a substantial fraction of Earth's biodiversity; however, they exploit a minority of plant lineages. For instance, in the eastern U.S.A. and Canada, ~25% of bee species are pollen specialists, but they are hosted by a small fraction of the native, animal-pollinated angiosperms in the region: only 6% of plant genera and 3% of families support pollen-specialist bees. It is unclear why some plant lineages host specialist bees while others do not. We know that at least some specialist bees use plant taxa that are avoided by generalists, suggesting that specialist bees favor plants with low-quality pollen, potentially as a strategy to escape competition or obtain protection from natural enemies. There is also evidence that specialist bees prefer superabundant host plants. Here we investigate whether pollen quality and plant abundance predict patterns of host use by specialist bees in eastern North America. Through field observations, we find that plants hosting specialist bees are frequent sources of pollen for generalists, suggesting that their pollen is not generally avoided by bees due to poor pollen quality. In addition, our analysis of a large citizen-science dataset shows that regional abundance strongly predicts which plant genera in the eastern U.S.A. host pollen-specialist bees. Our results show that bees specialize on regionally abundant - but not necessarily low-quality - plant lineages. These plant lineages may provide more opportunities for the evolution of specialists and lower likelihood of specialist extinction. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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