نحل قلوي Alkali bee
| النحل القلوي | |
|---|---|
| ذكر النحل. الإطار السفلي هو تكبير للمستطيل الصغير في الإطار العلوي، ويُظهر Sancassania boharti يتطفل عليه. | |
| التصنيف العلمي | |
| أصنوفة غير معروفة (أصلحها): | Nomia (Acunomia) |
| Species: | Template:Taxonomy/NomiaN. melanderi
|
| Binomial name | |
| Template:Taxonomy/NomiaNomia melanderi (كوكرل، 1906)
| |
النحل القلوي alkali bee، الاسم العلمي Nomia melanderi،[1] هو نحل يعشش في الأراضي الصحراوية وأحواض الصحاري شبه القاحلة في غرب الولايات المتحدة. وقد وصفها تيودور درو أليسون كوكرل في 1906. بينما يعيشون انفرادياً، إلا أنهم يعششون بجانب بعضهم البعض، ويمكنهم تشكيل تجمعات فائقة الكثافة في المناطق ذات الظروف الجيدة.
يعشش هذا النحل في تربة مشبعة بالملح، أو قلوية. ومثل بعض أنواع النحل الأخرى، كـ Megachile rotundata، فإن النحل القلوي ملقح فعال للبرسيم الحجازي alfalfa.[2] يستخدم النحل تقنية متخصصة لفتح أزهار البرسيم الحجازي للتلقيح بالضغط عليها لفتح جذع الزهرة. ونظرًا لهذا، ولتفضيله حبوب اللقاح على الرحيق، وقدرته على الطيران في ظروف متنوعة، وأدائه الجيد بغض النظر عن جودة ري الحقل، يُفضل النحل القلوي على نحل العسل لتلقيح البرسيم الحجازي، إلا أن نحل "ميگاشيل روتونداتا" (Megachile rotundata) قد حلّ محله بشكل متزايد في السنوات الأخيرة.[3] نظرًا لعادات التعشيش غير العادية لهذه النحلة، طوّر المزارعون أساليب لتوفير أماكن لها في حقول طينية مالحة حيث يمكنها الحفر ووضع بيضها. بدأ المزارعون في القيام بذلك بعد أن أدركوا أن حرث الأراضي الطبيعية المسطحة كهذه يُقلل إنتاج البرسيم بشكل كبير.[4][5]
يمكن أن يعمل مضاهي هرمون الشباب (JH) ميثوپرين methoprene كعامل محتمل للحد من النحل القلوي حيث أن النحل إناث النحل من الأرجح أن تصل إلى مرحلة النضج التناسلي في وجود هرمون الشباب.[6] تعتبر النحل القلوي أيضًا نحلًا منعزلًا لأن الإناث لها أعشاشها الفردية وتعيش جنبًا إلى جنب مع إناث النحل القلوي الأخرى.
علم الأحياء
المظهر
The alkali bee is about two-thirds the size of a honeybee with black and metallic banding on the abdomen. Females have, but infrequently use, stingers and the males have white faces.[3] Males and females in the northern part of the range are larger than their counterparts to the south. This is theorized to allow larval bees to survive for longer without food and may also be related to a slightly longer day in the summer, allowing for increased brood provisioning.[7]
مفترسون وطفيليون
Larvae-specific threats include bee flies (Bombyliidae) and specifically Heterostylum robustum as well as oil beetles (Meloe niger) and both adults and larvae are susceptible to pesticide kills. Unusually, there are not any known kleptoparasites.[8] It is also preyed upon by the conopid fly Zodion obliquefasciatum[9] and is associated with the mite Imparipes apicola.
This mite has been found in association with alkali bees but not with other species within the genus Nomia. The mites seem to oviposit in conjunction with emergence of fungi in cells (possibly Ascosphaera). The fungi are either within the bodies of unhealthy larvae, but more commonly are found in the feces of healthy larvae. The fungi causes the fecal pellets to be strung together in a characteristic manner. After oviposition, the eggs develop, hatch, mate, feed on the fungus, then leave on the bee when it emerges. One generation of I. apicola is reared per generation of bee, so southern populations of bee which can rear multiple generations in a season are more likely to a have a high presence of mites. Adult females seem to host far more mites than the males who seem to host relatively few, and they fall into cells during the provisioning stage where they carry out their life cycle, One study found that 60% of cells had mites, and the average mite count within these cells was 5.7. Although the mites can reach high densities, they don't appear to harm the bees which is possibly due to their fungivorous nature.[7]
التوزع والموئل
The alkali bee lives in arid climates, primarily desert basins in the western United States from central Washington to southern California and east to western Colorado. They prefer to nest in moist, silty soils that have good drainage, a salty surface, and don't have vegetative groundcover. The hydrology of the soils appears to be the controlling factor for where nests are made. As soil makeup affects water retention and capillary action, soils with some clay and sand but mostly silt are preferred.[8]
السلوك
سلوك التعشيش
While solitary, alkali bees frequently nest in high densities. Females lay 1 to 2 eggs a day, and spend most of the day building the cell for the egg. Immediately after emergence a female begins to excavate the main burrow which usually entails digging for about 12 hours. The dirt is removed and using the mandibles and foretarsi, formed into pellets which are then deposited around the entrance to the burrow. The burrows are usually about 15–20 cm in depth, but in laboratory conditions with looser soil, much deeper burrows have been created. In addition to the main vertical burrow, smaller passageways are dug horizontally. From these shorter tunnels, small vertical holes called cells are created for oviposition.[10]
Cell creation usually begins the night after the main burrow is excavated. First, the "mine burrow" is dug and then a soil lining applied to the sides which reduces the size of the cell. Lastly a clear, lipid-rich secretion from the Dufour's gland (in the abdomen) is applied to the interior of the cell to waterproof it.[8]
After the cell is constructed, the female bee begins the process of provisioning. She brings back pollen and mixes it with nectar to form a ball which is then placed in the bottom of the cell. Any debris that makes its way into the cell during this period is meticulously removed. Once the pollen ball is completed, oviposition occurs. This is usually in the late afternoon. The egg is laid on top of the pollen ball, then the female leaves the cell without inspecting it and begins to cap the cell. The egg garners no further attention after this unless it becomes diseased. In this case, the cell will be opened and packed with dirt by the female.[10]
Three or four days after oviposition the egg hatches and the larva begins to consume the pollen ball. Once this has been consumed, the larva (now a prepupa) defecates and begins diapause. In the wild this process takes 11 to 12 days. In the southern region, eggs laid early in the season may emerge after this but for eggs later in the season or for those in the northern part of the range, the pupa will emerge as a bee in the following summer, cued by the warming soil temperatures.[10]
سلوك التغذي
Females must consume pollen as soon as they emerge in order for their ovaries to develop. They continue to consume pollen for at least two weeks. It is believed that because solitary bees have very large, lipid-rich eggs the pollen provides the lipids and amino acids required for making these eggs. Pollen consumption is larger in younger females, and primarily occurs in the afternoon and evening as pollen collected early in the day goes toward larval provisioning.[8]
سلوك التزاوج
In the first few weeks of the emergence period, the majority of emerging bees are male. Once they emerge, they begin patrolling for females who likely mate soon after emerging. Their attractiveness (driven by pheromones) decreases in the days after emerging. No evidence of courtship has been observed and the copulations last less than 30 seconds. While other males sometimes observe copulation, there isn't evidence for aggression or interference by these males [7]
جهود الحفاظ
The alkali bee is not ranked for conservation.[11] Due to its commercially important role as a pollinator of the alfalfa crop in the western and northwestern United States, it is not a species of concern, unlike many native bees. [12]
المراجع
- ^ Nomia melanderi Cockerell, 1906 (TSN {{{ID}}}). Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
- ^ "...Nomia melanderi, sustainably managed to pollinate alfalfa ...", USDA
- ^ أ ب Delaplane, K. S.; Mayer, D. F. (2000). Crop pollination by bees. doi:10.1079/9780851994482.0000. ISBN 9780851994482.
- ^ Moisset, Beatriz; Wojcik, Vicki. "The Alkali Bee (Nomia melanderi)". USDA Forest Service.
- ^ Matthew Cobb (Aug 11, 2018). "Buzz: A beautiful book shows why modern bees are hippy wasps at heart". New Scientist. (A book review of Buzz by Thor Hanson.)
- ^ Kapheim, Karen M.; Johnson, Makenna M. (2017). "Juvenile hormone, but not nutrition or social cues, affects reproductive maturation in solitary alkali bees (Nomia melanderi)" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Biology. 220 (Pt 20): 3794–3801. doi:10.1242/jeb.162255. PMID 28821570.
- ^ أ ب ت BioOne (Projet) (2004). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society (in English). Lawrence, Kan.: Kansas Entomological Society. OCLC 300283411.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ أ ب ت ث Cane, James H. (2008-05-01). "A native ground-nesting bee (Nomia melanderi) sustainably managed to pollinate alfalfa across an intensively agricultural landscape". Apidologie (in الإنجليزية). 39 (3): 315–323. doi:10.1051/apido:2008013. ISSN 1297-9678. S2CID 13556738.
- ^ Howell, J.F. (1967). "Biology of Zodion obliquefasciatum (Macq.) (Diptera: Conopidae) a parasite of the alkali bee, Nomia melanderi Ckll. (Hymenoptera: Halictidae)". Bulletin of the Washington Agriculture Experimental Station. 51: 1–33.
- ^ أ ب ت Batra, S. W. T. (1970-03-16). "Behavior of the Alkali Bee, Nomia melanderi, within the Nest (Hymenoptera: Halictidae)". Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 63 (2): 400–406. doi:10.1093/aesa/63.2.400. ISSN 0013-8746.
- ^ "Insect Orders". texasinsects.tamu.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-31.
- ^ Cane, James H. (25 January 2024). "The Extraordinary Alkali Bee, Nomia melanderi (Halictidae), the World's Only Intensively Managed Ground-Nesting Bee". Annual Review of Entomology (in الإنجليزية). 69 (1): 99–116. doi:10.1146/annurev-ento-020623-013716. ISSN 0066-4170. PMID 37585607.