Wednesday, 29 October 2003 - 1:36 PM
1012

This presentation is part of : Ten-Minute Papers, Section Cb. Apiculture and Social Insects

Attraction to old nest contents in two megachilid bees used as commercial pollinators

Theresa L. Pitts-Singer, USDA-ARS, Bee Biology and Systematics Laboratory, Logan, UT and James S. Buckner, USDA-ARS, Biosciences Research Laboratory, 1605 Albrecht Blvd, POB 5674 SU Stn, Fargo, ND.

Attraction to the contents of old nests was examined in the blue orchard bee, Osmia lignaria and the alfalfa leafcutting bee, Megachile rotundata. Mated, inexperienced females of the same age were subjected to Y-tube tests in which they could move towards an airstream flowing through an empty blank or through a capsule containing material that may be found in old nesting material. For O. lignaria, the materials tested against the blank were empty female cocoon, paper straw used as nesting cavity, female meconium, feces, and mud plug. For M. rotundata, the materials tested against the blank were empty female cocoon, leaf pieces used in cell construction, female meconium, and feces. Each nesting material was also tested against all the other materials for M. rotundata. Nest materials were examined using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry in order to find chemical components that may be the attractive to these cavity-nesting bees. This study may help in the development of more attractive, clean nesting material, a desirable commodity in the management of these economically important solitary bees.

Species 1: Hymenoptera Megachilidae Osmia lignaria (blue orchard bee)
Species 2: Hymenoptera Megachilidae Megachile rotundata (alfalfa leafcutting bee)
Keywords: nest attraction, solitary bee

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