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  1. Book ; Online ; E-Book: The solitary bees

    Danforth, Bryan N. / Neff, John L. / Minckley, Robert L.

    biology, evolution, conservation

    2019  

    Author's details Bryan N. Danforth, Robert L. Minckley, John L. Neff
    Keywords Bees / Behavior ; Bees ; Pollination by insects ; SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Zoology / General ; bisacsh
    Language English
    Size 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 472 Seiten), Illustrationen
    Publisher Princeton University Press
    Publishing place Princeton ; Oxford
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Book ; Online ; E-Book
    Remark Zugriff für angemeldete ZB MED-Nutzerinnen und -Nutzer
    HBZ-ID HT020199817
    ISBN 978-0-691-18932-1 ; 9780691168982 ; 0-691-18932-3 ; 0691168989
    Database ZB MED Catalogue: Medicine, Health, Nutrition, Environment, Agriculture

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  2. Article ; Online: Evolutionary Origins and Patterns of Diversification in Animal Brood Parasitism.

    Sless, Trevor J L / Danforth, Bryan N / Searle, Jeremy B

    The American naturalist

    2023  Volume 202, Issue 2, Page(s) 107–121

    Abstract: AbstractBrood parasitism involves the exploitation of host parental care rather than the extraction of resources directly from hosts. We identify defining characteristics of this strategy and consider its position along continua with adjacent behaviors ... ...

    Abstract AbstractBrood parasitism involves the exploitation of host parental care rather than the extraction of resources directly from hosts. We identify defining characteristics of this strategy and consider its position along continua with adjacent behaviors but focus on canonical brood parasites, where parasitism is obligate and hosts are noneusocial (thereby distinguishing from social parasitism). A systematic literature survey revealed 59 independently derived brood parasitic lineages with most origins (49) in insects, particularly among bees and wasps, and other origins in birds (seven) and fish (three). Insects account for more than 98% of brood parasitic species, with much of that diversity reflecting ancient (≥100-million-year-old) brood parasitic lineages. Brood parasites usually, but not always, evolve from forms that show parental care. In insects, brood parasitism often first evolves through exploitation of a closely related species, following Emery's rule, but this is less typical in birds, which we discuss. We conducted lineage-level comparisons between brood parasitic clades and their sister groups, finding mixed results but an overall neutral to negative effect of brood parasitism on species richness and diversification. Our review of brood parasites reveals many unanswered questions requiring new research, including further modeling of the coevolutionary dynamics of brood parasites and their hosts.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Bees ; Host-Parasite Interactions ; Biological Evolution ; Parasites ; Insecta ; Birds ; Nesting Behavior
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-26
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Review ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
    ZDB-ID 207092-3
    ISSN 1537-5323 ; 0003-0147
    ISSN (online) 1537-5323
    ISSN 0003-0147
    DOI 10.1086/724839
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: The North American bees of the genus Ptilothrix Cresson, 1878 (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Emphorini), with the description of two new species

    Flórez-Gómez, Nathalia / Danforth, Bryan

    Journal of Hymenoptera Research. 2023 Feb. 24, v. 95 p.275-293

    2023  

    Abstract: AbstractPtilothrix Cresson is a genus of New World bees with an amphitropical distribution. Like other genera in the tribe Emphorini, Ptilothrix have narrow pollen preferences. These solitary ground-nesting bees exhibit a remarkable nesting behavior in ... ...

    Abstract AbstractPtilothrix Cresson is a genus of New World bees with an amphitropical distribution. Like other genera in the tribe Emphorini, Ptilothrix have narrow pollen preferences. These solitary ground-nesting bees exhibit a remarkable nesting behavior in which females carry water from ponds to facilitate the excavation of the hard soil where they nest. With 16 described species, there are few taxonomic studies and, before this work, a lack of taxonomic treatments for the species in North America. Thus, in this study we revised and recognized four species for the region: Ptilothrix bombiformis Cresson, Ptilothrix sumichrasti Cresson, Ptilothrix chiricahua Florez-Gomez & Danforth, sp. nov. and Ptilothrix zacateca Florez-Gomez & Danforth, sp. nov. We describe and illustrate males and females of the two new species. We also present diagnoses for the four species, a key to identify them, and a map of their geographic distributions.
    Keywords Apidae ; new species ; pollen ; research ; soil ; North America ; Anthophila ; Apoidea ; Chiricahua ; Mexico ; taxonomy
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-0224
    Size p. 275-293.
    Publishing place Pensoft Publishers
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2477175-2
    ISSN 1314-2607 ; 1070-9428
    ISSN (online) 1314-2607
    ISSN 1070-9428
    DOI 10.3897/jhr.95.96025
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  4. Article ; Online: Lessons from assembling UCEs: A comparison of common methods and the case of Clavinomia (Halictidae).

    Bossert, Silas / Pauly, Alain / Danforth, Bryan N / Orr, Michael C / Murray, Elizabeth A

    Molecular ecology resources

    2024  Volume 24, Issue 3, Page(s) e13925

    Abstract: Sequence data assembly is a foundational step in high-throughput sequencing, with untold consequences for downstream analyses. Despite this, few studies have interrogated the many methods for assembling phylogenomic UCE data for their comparative ... ...

    Abstract Sequence data assembly is a foundational step in high-throughput sequencing, with untold consequences for downstream analyses. Despite this, few studies have interrogated the many methods for assembling phylogenomic UCE data for their comparative efficacy, or for how outputs may be impacted. We study this by comparing the most commonly used assembly methods for UCEs in the under-studied bee lineage Nomiinae and a representative sampling of relatives. Data for 63 UCE-only and 75 mixed taxa were assembled with five methods, including ABySS, HybPiper, SPAdes, Trinity and Velvet, and then benchmarked for their relative performance in terms of locus capture parameters and phylogenetic reconstruction. Unexpectedly, Trinity and Velvet trailed the other methods in terms of locus capture and DNA matrix density, whereas SPAdes performed favourably in most assessed metrics. In comparison with SPAdes, the guided-assembly approach HybPiper generally recovered the highest quality loci but in lower numbers. Based on our results, we formally move Clavinomia to Dieunomiini and render Epinomia once more a subgenus of Dieunomia. We strongly advise that future studies more closely examine the influence of assembly approach on their results, or, minimally, use better-performing assembly methods such as SPAdes or HybPiper. In this way, we can move forward with phylogenomic studies in a more standardized, comparable manner.
    MeSH term(s) Bees/genetics ; Animals ; Phylogeny
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-06
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2406833-0
    ISSN 1755-0998 ; 1755-098X
    ISSN (online) 1755-0998
    ISSN 1755-098X
    DOI 10.1111/1755-0998.13925
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Genome of the bee Holcopasites calliopsidis-a species showing the common apid trait of brood parasitism.

    Sless, Trevor J L / Searle, Jeremy B / Danforth, Bryan N

    G3 (Bethesda, Md.)

    2022  Volume 12, Issue 8

    Abstract: Brood parasites represent a substantial but often poorly studied fraction of the wider diversity of bees. Brood parasitic bees complete their life cycles by infiltrating the nests of solitary host bees thereby enabling their offspring to exploit the food ...

    Abstract Brood parasites represent a substantial but often poorly studied fraction of the wider diversity of bees. Brood parasitic bees complete their life cycles by infiltrating the nests of solitary host bees thereby enabling their offspring to exploit the food provisions intended for the host's offspring. Here, we present the draft assembly of the bee Holcopasites calliopsidis, the first brood parasitic species to be the subject of detailed genomic analysis. Consistent with previous findings on the genomic signatures of parasitism more broadly, we find that H. calliopsidis has the smallest genome currently known among bees (179 Mb). This small genome does not appear to be the result of purging of repetitive DNA, with some indications of novel repetitive elements which may show signs of recent expansion. Nor does H. calliopsidis demonstrate any apparent net loss of genic content in comparison with nonparasitic species, though many individual gene families do show significant contractions. Although the basis of the small genome size of this species remains unclear, the identification of over 12,000 putative genes-with functional annotation for nearly 10,000 of these-is an important step in investigating the genomic basis of brood parasitism and provides a valuable dataset to be compared against new genomes that remain to be sequenced.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Base Sequence ; Bees/genetics ; Parasites ; Phenotype ; Symbiosis
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-06-27
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2629978-1
    ISSN 2160-1836 ; 2160-1836
    ISSN (online) 2160-1836
    ISSN 2160-1836
    DOI 10.1093/g3journal/jkac160
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article: Exosymbiotic microbes within fermented pollen provisions are as important for the development of solitary bees as the pollen itself.

    Dharampal, Prarthana S / Danforth, Bryan N / Steffan, Shawn A

    Ecology and evolution

    2022  Volume 12, Issue 4, Page(s) e8788

    Abstract: Developing bees derive significant benefits from the microbes present within their guts and fermenting pollen provisions. External microbial symbionts (exosymbionts) associated with larval diets may be particularly important for solitary bees that suffer ...

    Abstract Developing bees derive significant benefits from the microbes present within their guts and fermenting pollen provisions. External microbial symbionts (exosymbionts) associated with larval diets may be particularly important for solitary bees that suffer reduced fitness when denied microbe-colonized pollen.To investigate whether this phenomenon is generalizable across foraging strategy, we examined the effects of exosymbiont presence/absence across two solitary bee species, a pollen specialist and generalist. Larvae from each species were reared on either microbe-rich natural or microbe-deficient sterilized pollen provisions allocated by a female forager belonging to their own species (conspecific-sourced pollen) or that of another species (heterospecific-sourced pollen). Our results reveal that the presence of pollen-associated microbes was critical for the survival of both the generalist and specialist larvae, regardless of whether the pollen was sourced from a conspecific or heterospecific forager.Given the positive effects of exosymbiotic microbes for larval fitness, we then examined if the magnitude of this benefit varied based on whether the microbes were provisioned by a conspecific forager (the mother bee) or a heterospecific forager. In this second study, generalist larvae were reared only on microbe-rich pollen provisions, but importantly, the sources (conspecific versus heterospecific) of the microbes and pollen were experimentally manipulated.Bee fitness metrics indicated that microbial and pollen sourcing both had significant impacts on larval performance, and the effect sizes of each were similar. Moreover, the effects of conspecific-sourced microbes and conspecific-sourced pollen were strongly positive, while that of heterospecific-sourced microbes and heterospecific-sourced pollen, strongly negative.Our findings imply that not only is the presence of exosymbionts critical for both specialist and generalist solitary bees, but more notably, that the composition of the specific microbial community within larval pollen provisions may be as critical for bee development as the composition of the pollen itself.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-04-06
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2635675-2
    ISSN 2045-7758
    ISSN 2045-7758
    DOI 10.1002/ece3.8788
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article: Climate-driven range shifts of a rare specialist bee, Macropis nuda (Melittidae), and its host plant, Lysimachia ciliata (Primulaceae)

    Buckner, Mark A. / Danforth, Bryan N.

    Global ecology and conservation. 2022 Sept., v. 37

    2022  

    Abstract: Earth's climate is on track to surpass the proposed mean global temperature change limit of 1.5ºC above pre-industrial levels, threatening to disrupt ecosystems globally. Yet, studies on temperate bee response to climate change are limited, with most ... ...

    Abstract Earth's climate is on track to surpass the proposed mean global temperature change limit of 1.5ºC above pre-industrial levels, threatening to disrupt ecosystems globally. Yet, studies on temperate bee response to climate change are limited, with most studies of non-Apis bees focusing on the eusocial genus Bombus. Here, we assess the response of a rare habitat and host plant specialist bee, Macropis nuda, to projected climate change scenarios. We use species distribution models of M. nuda and its host plant, Lysimachia ciliata, trained on publicly available occurrence records, to evaluate bee distribution and habitat suitability changes under four climate change scenarios. We find that the bee and host plant distributions respond synchronously to increased greenhouse gas emissions, which result in range-wide habitat suitability loss and a northward range shift. These results provide an important example of a temperate solitary bee's response to climate change and help inform conservation efforts to preserve pollinator biodiversity and pollinator-host plant relationships.
    Keywords Bombus ; Lysimachia ciliata ; Macropis nuda ; biodiversity ; climate ; climate change ; geographical distribution ; greenhouse gases ; habitats ; host plants ; pollinators ; solitary bees ; temperature
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-09
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2814786-8
    ISSN 2351-9894
    ISSN 2351-9894
    DOI 10.1016/j.gecco.2022.e02180
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  8. Article: Solitary bee larvae modify bacterial diversity of pollen provisions in the stem-nesting bee,

    Kueneman, Jordan G / Gillung, Jessica / Van Dyke, Maria T / Fordyce, Rachel F / Danforth, Bryan N

    Frontiers in microbiology

    2023  Volume 13, Page(s) 1057626

    Abstract: Microbes, including diverse bacteria and fungi, play an important role in the health of both solitary and social bees. Among solitary bee species, in which larvae remain in a closed brood cell throughout development, experiments that modified or ... ...

    Abstract Microbes, including diverse bacteria and fungi, play an important role in the health of both solitary and social bees. Among solitary bee species, in which larvae remain in a closed brood cell throughout development, experiments that modified or eliminated the brood cell microbiome through sterilization indicated that microbes contribute substantially to larval nutrition and are in some cases essential for larval development. To better understand how feeding larvae impact the microbial community of their pollen/nectar provisions, we examine the temporal shift in the bacterial community in the presence and absence of actively feeding larvae of the solitary, stem-nesting bee,
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-01-09
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2587354-4
    ISSN 1664-302X
    ISSN 1664-302X
    DOI 10.3389/fmicb.2022.1057626
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: Phylogenomic inference of the higher classification of velvet ants (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae)

    Waldren, George C. / Sadler, Emily A. / Murray, Elizabeth A. / Bossert, Silas / Danforth, Bryan N. / Pitts, James P.

    Systematic Entomology. 2023 July, v. 48, no. 3 p.463-487

    2023  

    Abstract: The family Mutillidae (Hymenoptera) is a species‐rich group of aculeate wasps that occur worldwide. The higher‐level classification of the family has historically been controversial due, in part, to the extreme sexual dimorphism exhibited by these ... ...

    Abstract The family Mutillidae (Hymenoptera) is a species‐rich group of aculeate wasps that occur worldwide. The higher‐level classification of the family has historically been controversial due, in part, to the extreme sexual dimorphism exhibited by these insects and their morphological similarity to other wasp taxa that also have apterous females. Modern hypotheses on the internal higher classification of Mutillidae have been exclusively based on morphology and, further, they include Myrmosinae as a mutillid subfamily. In contrast, several molecular‐based family‐level studies of Aculeata recovered Myrmosinae as a nonmutillid taxon. To test the validity of these morphology‐based classifications and the phylogenetic placement of the controversial taxon Myrmosinae, a phylogenomic study of Mutillidae was conducted using ultraconserved elements (UCEs). All currently recognized subfamilies and tribes of Mutillidae were represented in this study using 140 ingroup taxa. The maximum likelihood criterion (ML) and the maximum parsimony criterion (MP) were used to infer the phylogenetic relationships within the family and related taxa using an aligned data set of 238,764 characters; the topologies of these respective analyses were largely congruent. The modern higher classification of Mutillidae, based on morphology, is largely congruent with the phylogenomic results of this study at the subfamily level, whereas the tribal classification is poorly supported. The subfamily Myrmosinae was recovered as sister to Sapygidae in the ML analysis and sister to Sapygidae + Pompilidae in the MP analysis; it is consequently raised to the family level, Myrmosidae, stat.nov. The two constituent tribes of Myrmosidae are raised to the subfamily level, Kudakrumiinae, stat.nov., and Myrmosinae, stat.nov. All four recognized tribes of Mutillinae were found to be non‐monophyletic; three additional mutilline clades were recovered in addition to Ctenotillini, Mutillini, Smicromyrmini, and Trogaspidiini sensu stricto. Three new tribes are erected for members of these clades: Pristomutillini Waldren, trib.nov., Psammothermini Waldren, trib.nov., and Zeugomutillini Waldren, trib.nov. All three recognized tribes of Sphaeropthalminae were found to be non‐monophyletic; six additional sphaeropthalmine clades were recovered in addition to Dasymutillini, Pseudomethocini, and Sphaeropthalmini sensu stricto. The subtribe Ephutina of Mutillinae: Mutillini was found to be polyphyletic, with the Ephuta genus‐group recovered within Sphaeropthalminae and the Odontomutilla genus‐group recovered as sister to Myrmillinae + Mutillinae. Consequently, the subtribe Ephutina is transferred from Mutillinae: Mutillini and is raised to a tribe within Sphaeropthalminae, Ephutini, stat.nov. Further, the taxon Odontomutillinae, stat.nov., is raised from a synonym of Ephutina to the subfamily level. The sphaeropthalmine tribe Pseudomethocini was found to be polyphyletic, with the subtribe Euspinoliina recovered as a separate clade in Sphaeropthalminae; consequently, Euspinoliina is raised to a tribe, Euspinoliini, stat.nov., in Sphaeropthalminae. The dasylabrine tribe Apteromutillini was recovered within Dasylabrini and is proposed as a new synonym of Dasylabrinae. Finally, dating analyses were conducted to infer the ages of the Pompiloidea families (Mutillidae, Myrmosidae, Pompilidae, and Sapygidae) and the ages of the Mutillidae subfamilies and tribes.
    Keywords Mutillidae ; Pompilidae ; Sapygidae ; data collection ; entomology ; polyphyly ; sexual dimorphism ; statistical analysis ; wasps
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-07
    Size p. 463-487.
    Publishing place Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Document type Article ; Online
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 223608-4
    ISSN 0307-6970
    ISSN 0307-6970
    DOI 10.1111/syen.12588
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  10. Article ; Online: Spillover of chalkbrood fungi to native solitary bee species from non‐native congeners

    LeCroy, Kathryn A. / Krichilsky, Erin / Grab, Heather L. / Roulston, T’ai H. / Danforth, Bryan N.

    Journal of Applied Ecology. 2023 June, v. 60, no. 6 p.1067-1076

    2023  

    Abstract: Introduced, managed bees such as mason bees (genus Osmia) can confer significant pollination benefits to agricultural systems, but a risk of introducing non‐native species into new ecosystems is the co‐introduction of pathogens along with them. Pathogen ... ...

    Abstract Introduced, managed bees such as mason bees (genus Osmia) can confer significant pollination benefits to agricultural systems, but a risk of introducing non‐native species into new ecosystems is the co‐introduction of pathogens along with them. Pathogen spillover to wild, native bees may then drive native bee species declines. This study examined prevalence of the chalkbrood‐causing fungal genus Ascosphaera in the nests of both non‐native and native mason bee species. We conducted large‐scale trap‐nesting and pan‐trapping efforts across the Mid‐Atlantic United States with community scientists. Using molecular methods, nests were screened for all known Ascosphaera species in which genetic sequences have been published. After finding Ascosphaera species first described in Asia, we compared their local prevalence with the local abundance of mason bees from Asia. Lastly, we compared the prevalence of co‐introduced Ascosphaera species across sites with a variety of landcover profiles. Results indicate species originally described in Japan, Ascosphaera naganensis and Ascosphaera fusiformis, are now present in native Virginia mason bees, Osmia lignaria and Osmia georgica, with high prevalence of A. naganensis found in O. georgica. We also found that the declining native mason bee O. georgica experienced higher prevalence of non‐native Ascosphaera spp. at sites with larger numbers of non‐native O. cornifrons and O. taurus, perhaps indicating greater likelihood of spillover of these Ascosphaera species with greater sources of transmission. Lastly, when the proportion of agricultural landcover surrounding bee nests was high, there was greater prevalence of non‐native Ascosphaera in O. georgica compared to more natural landcover types. Synthesis and applications. Through community science programming, we documented species of Japanese chalkbrood fungi inside native mason bee nests in North America. Native mason bees encounter non‐native fungi more frequently with increasing abundance of non‐native mason bees. Agricultural landscapes may exacerbate spillover of non‐native fungi for native mason bees. Any use of non‐native bee species in agriculture should involve monitoring native bees for pathogens in the surrounding area for detection of spillover and species declines.
    Keywords Ascosphaera ; Japan ; Osmia lignaria ; applied ecology ; chalk brood ; fungi ; introduced species ; land cover ; mason bees ; pathogens ; pollination ; risk ; Virginia
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-06
    Size p. 1067-1076.
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
    Document type Article ; Online
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 410405-5
    ISSN 1365-2664 ; 0021-8901
    ISSN (online) 1365-2664
    ISSN 0021-8901
    DOI 10.1111/1365-2664.14399
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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