2012
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-012-2535-1
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Variability in bumblebee pollination buzzes affects the quantity of pollen released from flowers

Abstract: Buzz-pollination is a plant strategy that promotes gamete transfer by requiring a pollinator, typically bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea), to vibrate a flower's anthers in order to extract pollen. Although buzz-pollination is widespread in angiosperms with over 20,000 species using it, little is known about the functional connection between natural variation in buzzing vibrations and the amount of pollen that can be extracted from anthers. We characterized variability in the vibrations produced by Bombus terrestris … Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(119 citation statements)
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“…While buzzing flowers, these bees contact the stigma in most visits because their body size usually exceeds the gap between anthers and stigma (see Liu & Pemberton, ; Solís‐Montero & Vallejo‐Marín, ). Flower‐buzzing bees, like those of Bombini, Centridini, Euglossini and Xylocopini effectively adjust pollen‐collecting behaviour to quickly extract large amounts of pollen from poricidal anthers (Buchmann, ; Buchmann & Hurley, ; Burkart et al, ; De Luca et al, ; Renner, ; Russell, Buchmann, & Papaj, ). Almost all these bee species were network peripherals and visit flowers of a few plant species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While buzzing flowers, these bees contact the stigma in most visits because their body size usually exceeds the gap between anthers and stigma (see Liu & Pemberton, ; Solís‐Montero & Vallejo‐Marín, ). Flower‐buzzing bees, like those of Bombini, Centridini, Euglossini and Xylocopini effectively adjust pollen‐collecting behaviour to quickly extract large amounts of pollen from poricidal anthers (Buchmann, ; Buchmann & Hurley, ; Burkart et al, ; De Luca et al, ; Renner, ; Russell, Buchmann, & Papaj, ). Almost all these bee species were network peripherals and visit flowers of a few plant species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bumblebees have several adaptations such as the ability to buzz pollinate (sonication) and their insulated bodies making them ideal pollinators for these plant and crop species (De Luca et al., 2013, Goulson, 2010, Heinrich, 1993, Velthuis and Van Doorn, 2006). Unlike honey bees, bumblebees do not produce honey or hive material suitable for mass market sales.…”
Section: Bumblebee Domesticationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies of buzz pollination, where bees use vibrational movements to shake pollen from small pores in a flowers' anthers, show that both bumblebees and carpenter bees adjust their flower handling time according to the amount of pollen released by a flower (Buchmann & Cane ; De Luca et al . ; Burkart, Schlindwein & Lunau ), though this is not necessarily true for all flowers with poricidal anthers (Nunes‐Silva et al . ).…”
Section: Mechanosensory Feedback During Pollen Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%