Abstract
In order to adopt correct conservation strike plans to maintain bee pollination activity it is necessary to know the species' resource utilisation and requirements. We investigated the floral resources and the nesting requirements of the eusocial bee Lasioglossum malachurum Kirby at various sites in a Mediterranean landscape. Analysis of bees' pollen loads showed that Compositae was the more exploited family, although interpopulations differences appeared in the pollen types used. From 5 to 7 pollen types were used by bees, but only as few as 11.9 per load. Variations of the pollen spectrum through the annual nesting cycle were conspicuous. At all sites, bees nested in horizontal ground areas with high soil hardness, low acidity, and rare superficial stones. On the other side, the exploited soil was variable in soil granulometry (although always high in of silt or sand) and it was moderately variable in content of organic matter and highly variable in vegetation cover. Creation of ground patches with these characteristics in proximity of both cultivated and natural flowering fields may successfully promote colonization of new areas by this bee. © 2010 Carlo Polidori et al.
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CITATION STYLE
Polidori, C., Rubichi, A., Barbieri, V., Trombino, L., & Donegana, M. (2010). Floral resources and nesting requirements of the ground-nesting social bee, Lasioglossum malachurum (hymenoptera: Halictidae), in a Mediterranean semiagricultural landscape. Psyche (London). https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/851947
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