Notes on the nesting of three species of Megachilinae in the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve, UAE
Author
Gess, Sarah Kathleen
Albany Museum and Rhodes University, Grahamstown, 6139 South Africa
s.gess@ru.ac.za
Author
Roosenschoon, Peter Alexander
Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
text
Journal of Hymenoptera Research
2017
2017-02-27
54
43
56
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.54.11290
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.54.11290
1314-2607-54-43
B68BE62E69C440D987BE27D604E6DD61
EA215937FF89E311914CFFB4410DFFB4
322874
Megachile (Eurymella) patellimana
Taxonomy.
In
Gess and Gess (2003)
and in
Gess and Roosenschoon (2016)
Megachile patellimana
is given as belonging to the subgenus
Eutricharaea
, following
Michener (2007)
who did not consider the subgenus
Eurymella
Pasteels (1965)
to be distinct from the subgenus
Eutricharaea
.
Michener's
opinion was generally accepted (e.g.
Eardley et al. 2010
,
Eardley 2013
). However, in their analysis
Trunz et al. (2016)
revisit the status of
Eurymella
and recognize it as a valid subgenus distinct from
Eutricharaea
Their opinion has been accepted and in the present contribution
Eurymella
is recognized as being distinct from
Eutricharaea
given that both groups appear distantly related in the phylogeny of Trunz et al.
The female of
Megachile patellimana
, like most species of
Eurymella
, has robust mandibles with particularly large and acute teeth, as also seen in the subgenus
Creightonella
. In
Eutricharaea
, in contrast, the female mandibles are mostly less robust and the teeth smaller.
Distribution.
Widely distributed in western Palaearctic, particularly in the Mediterranean, Asia Minor, Egypt and UAE, also south-western Africa, Sudan, Niger and Mozambique (
Gess and Roosenschoon 2016
).
Flower visiting.
In the DDCR
Megachile patellimana
has been recorded from flowers of
Apocynaceae
:
Asclepiadoideae
,
Leptadenia pyrotechnica
;
Asteraceae
:
Centaurea pseudosinaica
Czerep.;
Boraginaceae
:
Heliotropium kotschyi
;
Brassicaceae
:
Farsetia linearis
Decne ex Boiss.;
Fabaceae
:
Mimosoideae
:
Prosopis cineraria
;
Fabaceae
:
Papilionoideae
:
Crotalaria aegyptiaca
Benth.;
Zygophyllaceae
:
Tribulus maropterus
Boiss.(
Gess and Roosenschoon 2016
).
In Namibia this species has been recorded from flowers of
Crotalaria podocarpa
DC (
Papilionoideae
) (
Gess and Gess 2003
).
Nesting.
The only published mention of the nesting of
Megachile patellimana
appears to be the statement in
Alfken (1934
, page 148) that "Als echte Blattschneiderbiene ist auch
Megachile patellimana
M. Spin. beobachet worden" [
Megachile patellimana
has also been observed as a true leaf-cutting species]. The nesting situation does not seem to have been recorded.
The only other observations on nesting by a species of the subgenus
Eurymella
seem to be those for
Megachile bucephala
(Fabricius) (as
Megachile semifulva
Friese, recently placed in synonymy with
Megachile bucephala
(Eardley, 2013); this synonymy requires confirmation given that
Pasteels (1965
: 127) mentions that there are sculptural differences
between
Megachile semifulva
and
Megachile bucephala
(C. Praz, pers. comm.)). These observations "Nests in ground 6-7 inched vertical; lined with blade of certain grass, selected them before biting; measures it by running up and down. The pieces varied in length from 3-4 inches. St. W. Warley, 29.X.1916" quoted by
Pasteels (1965
: page 127) are from manuscript copies in the Natal and Durban museums.
It therefore seems worth recording the fragmentary observations on the nesting of
Megachile patellimana
in the DDCR where it was observed to be nesting at Tawi Manana in burrows excavated in compacted sand beneath
Heliotropium kotschyi
plants and at the Camel Farm in burrows excavated in the compacted sand banks of an irrigation furrow. It was not clear whether the burrows had been originated by
Megachile patellimana
or were pre-existing.
At Tawi Manana a female was captured carrying a piece of cut green leaf (approx. length 10 mm and approx. width 5 mm) and at the Camel Farm a female was captured carrying into a burrow a piece of tough green plastic approximately 10 mm in length cut from a strip 2 mm wide and almost 1 mm in thickness (Fig.
16
). Attempts to excavate the nests did not yield nest plans. In the nest of the female carrying plastic six more identical pieces of plastic (average length10 mm) were discovered grouped together in an apparent attempt to construct a cell. The cutting of the tough plastic would have been possible by using the large, robustly and acutely toothed mandibles.
The use of plastic by
Megahile patellimana
, though surprising, is supported by the observations of
MacIvor and Moore (2013)
who reported that
Megachile rotundata
Fabricius, which normally uses cut pieces of plant leaf, was found constructing brood cells out of cut pieces of polyethylene-based plastic bags. In addition to recording the use of plastic bags by
Megachile rotundata
MacIvor and Moore reported, even more surprisingly, that
Megachile campanulae
(Robertson), which uses plant and tree resins, was found to have made brood cells constructed out of a polyurethane-based exterior building sealant. In their discussion they suggested that "Although perhaps incidentally collected, the novel use of plastics in the nests of bees could reflect eco
logically
adaptive traits necessary for survival in an increasingly human-dominated environment".
It is clear that the flexible pieces cut from polyethylene bags by
Megachile rotundata
were successfully used to construct cells whereas it is seems unlikely that
Megahile patellimana
would have successfully constructed cells from the stiff, narrow strips of plastic that she was assembling within her nesting burrow.
Provision.
As both the nesting females were captured carrying nesting materials their scopae were empty and as nesting was in an early stage no provision was obtained from the nests.
Figure 7.
Trap-nests 1-4 as at 25 May 2016 after
Megachile maxillosa
imagines had emerged from all of the cells. Trap-nest 3 shows the remains of the nest of
Pseudoheriades grandiceps
that preceded the nest of
Megachile maxillosa
.