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Stingless bee (Apidae, Meliponini) guilds occurring in the immediate edges of forest fragments of the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará, Brazil

Abstract

This study investigated the occurrence of individuals of stingless bees attracted by the trophic resources existing in four edge areas of forest fragments located in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará. In this sense, the study evaluated the species richness in the areas; the absolute abundance of species; the similarity of species between edges; and the affinity of bees for the same plant species. The sampling of bees compiled a total of 20 species distributed in 12 genera. Seven species stood out for abundance and two (Trigona spinipes and Trigona fulviventris) showed dominance. The results also showed that the fragments present a similar stingless bee fauna and the affinity of the bee species for the same plant species revealed the formation of five distinct bee groups in foraging preferences involving 15 (75%) out of the 20 species of bees studied.

Key words
foraging; meliponini bees; species richness; trophic resources

INTRODUCTION

In the neotropics, researchers have faced difficulties in bee census procedures due to the degradation of natural environments (Brosi et al. 2008BROSI BJ, DAILY GC, SHIH TM, OVIEDO F & DURAN G. 2008. The effects of forest fragmentation on bee communities in tropical country side. J Appl Ecol 45: 773-783.). This process is characterized mainly by the fragmentation of habitats caused almost always by anthropogenic actions carried out over the centuries (Viana & Pinheiro 1998VIANA VM & PINHEIRO AFV. 1998. Conservação da biodiversidade em fragmentos florestais. Série Téc IPEF 12(32): 25-42., Cerqueira et al. 2003CERQUEIRA R, BRANT A, NASCIMENTO MT & PARDINI R. 2003. Fragmentação: alguns conceitos, In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas: causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 23-40., Brown & Lomolino 2006BROWN JH & LOMOLINO MV. 2006. Biogeografia. Ribeirão Preto: FUNPEC Editora, 691 p.). At the immediate edges of these fragments, the dynamics of biological interactions are altered by new established physical conditions (Bierregaard et al. 1992, Murcia 1995MURCIA C. 1995. Edge effects in fragmented forests: implication for conservation. Trends Ecol Evol 10: 58-62.).

Gene flow between animal and plant populations is the factor most drastically affected in space and time. In this case, the elements that contribute most to these genetic alterations are the fragment sizes, the distances between them and the permeability of the established matrix (Viana et al. 1992VIANA VM, TABANEZ AJA & MARTINEZ JLA. 1992. Restauração e manejo de fragmentos florestais. In: Anais do II Congresso Nacional sobre Essências Nativas- Conservação da biodiversidade, São Paulo. São Paulo: Instituto Florestal, p. 400-406., Scariot et al. 2003SCARIOT A, FREITAS SR, NETO EM, NASCIMENTO MT, OLIVEIRA LC, SANAIOTTI T, SEVILHA AC & VILLELA DM. 2003. Efeitos da fragmentação sobre a biodiversidade-vegetação e flora. In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas – causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 103-123., Schneider et al. 2003SCHNEIDER MPC ET AL. 2003. Efeitos da fragmentação sobre a biodiversidade – genética de populações naturais. In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas – causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 297-315.). In the group of Meliponini and other Apoidea, this critical limit is perceived through the emergence of diploid males, due to the lack of alleles for the proper genetic combinations (Kerr & Vencovsky 1982KERR WE & VENCOVSKY R. 1982. Melhoramento genético em abelhas I. Efeito do número de colônias sobre o melhoramento. Brazil J Genet 5: 279-285.).

Although these immediate edges of forest fragments are marked by the effects of human interference, they develop a flora, partly exotic, perfectly adapted and whose dynamics is directly related to the structural modification of the matrix (Cane 2001CANE JH. 2001. Habitat fragmentation and native bees: a premature verdict? Conserv Ecol 5(1): 3., López-Barrera 2004LÓPEZ-BARRERA F. 2004. Estructura y función en bordes de bosques. Ecosistems 13(1): 67-77., Ewers & Didham 2006EWERS RM & DIDHAM RK. 2006. Confounding factors in the detection of species responses to habitat fragmentation. Biol Rev 81: 117-142., Maciel et al. 2011MACIEL LA, SILES MFR & BITENCOURT MD. 2011. Alterações na vegetação herbácea de floresta ombrófila densa decorrentes do uso em uma trilha turística na Serra do Mar em São Paulo, Brasil. Acta Bot Bras 25(3): 628-632.). In these sites, a considerable richness of bee species, including of meliponini, has been observed using the trophic resources made available by this flora (Antonini et al. 2003ANTONINI Y, ACCACIO GM, BRANT A, CABRAL BC, FONTENELLE JCR, NASCIMENTO MT, THOMAZINI APBW & THOMAZINI MJ. 2003. Efeitos da fragmentação sobre a biodiversidade – insetos. In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas: causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 239-273., Gonçalves & Melo 2005GONÇALVES RB & MELO GAR. 2005. A comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apidae) em uma área restrita de campo natural no Parque Estadual de Vila Velha, Paraná: diversidade, fenologia e fontes florais de alimento. Rev Bras Entomol 49(4): 557-571., Gonçalves et al. 2009GONÇALVES RB, MELO GAR & AGUIAR AJC. 2009. A assembleia de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apidae) de uma área de campos naturais do Parque Estadual de Vila Velha, Paraná e comparações com áreas de campos e cerrados. Pap Avulsos Zool (São Paulo) 49(14): 163-181.). However, the pattern of occurrence of meliponini bees in these environments is also characterized by other factors such as the conservation of the fragments, the lack, the quality and the seasonality of trophic resources and the levels of relative humidity (Heithaus 1979HEITHAUS ER. 1979. Community structure of neotropical flower visiting bees and wasps: diversity and phenology. Ecology (N Y) 60: 675-691., Antonini et al. 2003ANTONINI Y, ACCACIO GM, BRANT A, CABRAL BC, FONTENELLE JCR, NASCIMENTO MT, THOMAZINI APBW & THOMAZINI MJ. 2003. Efeitos da fragmentação sobre a biodiversidade – insetos. In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas: causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 239-273., Brosi et al. 2008BROSI BJ, DAILY GC, SHIH TM, OVIEDO F & DURAN G. 2008. The effects of forest fragmentation on bee communities in tropical country side. J Appl Ecol 45: 773-783., Brosi 2009BROSI BJ. 2009. The complex of social stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) to tropical deforestation. For Ecol Manage 258: 1830-1837.).

Bee census studies carried out in anthropic areas of different Brazilian regions have shown a relatively large variation, mainly in the richness and abundance of stingless bee species, both as a function of the region and the plant typology (Locatelli et al. 2004LOCATELLI E, MACHADO ICS & MEDEIROS P. 2004. Riqueza de abelhas e a flora apícola em um fragmento da mata serrana (Brejo de Altitude) em Pernambuco, Nordeste do Brasil. In: Pôrto KC, Cabral JJP & Tabarelli M (Eds), Brejos de altitude em Pernambuco e Paraíba – História Natural, Ecologia e Conservação, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/CID Ambiental, Brasília-DF, p. 153-177., Aguiar & Zanella 2005AGUIAR CML & ZANELLA FCV. 2005. Estrutura da comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Apiformis) de uma área na margem do domínio da caatinga (Itatim, Bahia). Neotrop Entomol 34(1): 15-24., Batalha Filho et al. 2007BATALHA FILHO H, NUNES LA, PEREIRA DG & WALDSCHMIDT AM. 2007. Inventário da fauna de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) em uma área de caatinga da região de Jequié, Bahia. Biosci J 23(1): 24-29., Milet-Pinheiro & Schlindwein 2008MILET-PINHEIRO P & SCHLINDWEIN C. 2008. Comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) e plantas em uma área do agreste pernambucano, Brasil. Rev Bras Entomol 52(4): 625-636., in the Northeast region; Wilms et al. 1996WILMS W, IMPERATRIZ-FONSECA VL & ENGELS W. 1996.1996. Resource partitioning between highly eusocial bees and possible impact of the introduced africanized honey bee on native stingless bees in the brazilian atlantic rainforest. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 31: 137-151., Faria-Mucci et al. 2003FARIA-MUCCI GM, MEL MA & CAMPOS LAO. 2003. A fauna de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) e plantas utilizada como fontes de recursos florais, em um ecossistema de campos rupestres em Lavras Novas, Minas Gerais, Brasil. In: Melo GAR & Santos IA (Eds), Apoidea Neotropica – Homenagem aos 90 anos de Jesus Santiago Moure, Criciúma: UNESC Edições, Criciúma-SC, p. 241-256., Anacleto & Marchini 2005ANACLETO DA & MARCHINI LC. 2005. Análise faunística de abelhas (Hymenoptra, Apoidea) coletadas no cerrado do estado de São Paulo. Acta Sci Biol Sci 27(3): 277-284., Andena et al. 2005ANDENA SR, BEGO LR & MECHI MR. 2005. A comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) de uma área de cerrado (Corumbataí, SP) e suas visitas às flores. Revi Bras Zoociências 7(1): 55-91. in the Southeast region; Krug & Alves-dos-Santos 2008KRUG C & ALVES-DOS-SANTOS I. 2008. O uso de diferentes métodos para amostragem da fauna de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea), um estudo em Floresta Ombrófila Mista em Santa Catarina. Neotrop Entomol 37(3): 265-278., in the South region; Santos et al. 2004SANTOS FM, CARVALHO CAL & SILVA RF. 2004. Diversidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) em uma área de transição Cerrado-Amazônia. Acta Amazonica 34(2): 319-328. in the Central-West region). Outside Brazil, similar research was also carried out in environments affected by human activities, in the vicinity of fragments of ombrophilous forests, such as those of Heithaus (1979)HEITHAUS ER. 1979. Community structure of neotropical flower visiting bees and wasps: diversity and phenology. Ecology (N Y) 60: 675-691. and Samejima et al. (2004)SAMEJIMA H, MARZUKI M, NAGAMITSU T & NAKASIZUKA T. 2004. The effects of human disturbance on a stingless bees community in a tropical rainforest. Biol Conserv 120: 577-587. in Costa Rica (Central America), and Brosi et al. (2008)BROSI BJ, DAILY GC, SHIH TM, OVIEDO F & DURAN G. 2008. The effects of forest fragmentation on bee communities in tropical country side. J Appl Ecol 45: 773-783. and Brosi (2009)BROSI BJ. 2009. The complex of social stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) to tropical deforestation. For Ecol Manage 258: 1830-1837. in Malaysia (Southeast Asia).

In the State of Ceará, research on the Meliponini group and its trophic resources has not been carried out frequently on fragments of Atlantic forest such as those occurring in the Baturité Massif, Brazilian semi-arid. Recently, Lima-Verde et al. (2014)LIMA-VERDE LW, LOIOLA MIB & FREITAS BM. 2014. Angiosperm flora used by meliponine guilds (Apidae, Meliponina) occurring at rainforest edges in the state of Ceará, Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 86: 1395-1409. carried out a floristic survey in these same areas selected for this research to relate the plant species with the meliponini species.

In this sense, areas of immediate edges of forest fragments of this massif were selected to investigate the occurrence of species of these bees attracted by the trophic resources therein. In order to ecologically evaluate the behavior of this group of bees, four edges of four distinct forest fragments were used to answer the following questions: i) how is the richness of bee species represented in these areas?; ii) how is the abundance of individuals per species characterized in these environments?; (iii) how similar are the forest edges in bee species?; iv) how do bees relate to environmental variables? v) how does the sharing of floral resources occur among bees?

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study area

Field work was conducted in areas of the municipalities of Baturité, Guaramiranga and Mulungu located on the Baturité Massif (4° to 4° 30’ S and 38° 45’ to 39° 15’ W), northeast of the State of Ceará (Gomes 1978GOMES MAF. 1978. O maciço de Baturité – uma abordagem ecológica. In: Anonymous (Eds), Anais do III Encontro Nacional de Geógrafos, Fortaleza. Fortaleza: AGB/UFC, p. 39-59., Souza et al. 1994SOUZA MJN, SOARES AML, CARVALHO GMS, SOARES ZML & CRUZ MLB. 1994. Geossistemas e potencialidades dos recursos naturais – serra de Baturité e áreas sertanejas periféricas (Ceará). Fortaleza: FNMA/UFC/FUNCEME, Fortaleza-CE, 102 p., Souza 1997SOUZA MJN. 1997. Geomorfologia. In: IPLANCE (Eds), Fortaleza: Atlas do Ceará, Fortaleza-CE, p. 18-19.) (Fig. 1).

Figure 1
Location of sampling sites (F1, F2, F3, F4) in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará, Brazil. Source: SRTM/NASA.

The other geoenvironmental aspects are in agreement with the literature cited in Lima-Verde et al. (2014)LIMA-VERDE LW, LOIOLA MIB & FREITAS BM. 2014. Angiosperm flora used by meliponine guilds (Apidae, Meliponina) occurring at rainforest edges in the state of Ceará, Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 86: 1395-1409.. In this context. it is worth mentioning that the field work was carried out exclusively at the immediate edges of the forest fragments, the edges receiving the designations F1, F2, F3 and F4. F1 and F2 (municipality of Guaramiranga); F3 (municipality of Mulungu); and F4 (municipality of Baturité). In Table I, the denominations of local forest types were abbreviated to fodm (dense ombrophilous forest) and fedm (seasonal deciduous montane forest).

Table I
List of meliponini bees associated to the sampling sites F (Edge), to the number of species of plants visited (Nepv) and to the respective vegetation typology (Vegetation) in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará. M01-M20 (meliponini from 01 to 20), # (collection in the nest), * (new records), fodm (dense ombrophilous forest), fedm (seasonal deciduous montane forest).

Bee sampling

The procedure for bee sampling was based on the standardized methodology of Sakagami et al. (1967)SAKAGAMI SF, LAROCA S & MOURE JS. 1967. Wild bees biocenotics in São José dos Pinhais- PR, South Brazil – preliminary report. J Fac Sci Hokkaido Univ (Ser 6 Zool) 19: 253-291., with modifications according to local circumstances. Bee samplings were performed once in a month during 18 months, from March 2008 to August 2009 in all four forest fragment edges. Bees were sampled from 7:00 am to 5:00 pm, with the transects inspected in two directions, twice in the morning and twice in the afternoon, totaling 40 hours per month of collection effort in the four areas and 640 hours in the period. The collection of bees was carried out using entomological nets and occurred predominantly in herbaceous and shrubby plants and, more rarely, in arboreal specimens up to six meters high, as well as in entrances of the nests. In groups of herbaceous species and in shrub specimens, the collection time of the bees was about five minutes for each group and for each specimen. In the trees, this procedure occurred during 20 minutes, and the entomological net, in this case, was equipped with an extensible pole to reach the tree´s canopy.

The bees captured were killed in lethal vials containing ethyl acetate and then transferred to suitably labeled individual vials. In the laboratory, they were selected by morphospecies and identified according to Silveira et al. (2002)SILVEIRA FA, MELO GAR & ALMEIDA EAB. 2002. Abelhas brasileiras – sistemática e identificação. Belo Horizonte: Fundação Araucária, 253 p. and Michener (2007)MICHENER CD. 2007. The bees of the world. Washington DC: The John Hopkins University Press, 970 p., and part of the material was sent to experts for confirmation and identification. Material representative of the collections is deposited in the collection of the Bee Laboratory, Department of Animal Sciences, in the Federal University of Ceará.

Data analysis

Data were organized in matrices of abundance in which the columns corresponded to the species of bees and the rows to the monthly collections. For each edge, a matrix was constructed to evaluate the parameters to be studied. The species richness in the four edges was estimated through the calculations of the species accumulation curve (collector curve), according to Gotelli & Colwell (2001)GOTELLI NJ & COLWELL RK. 2001. Quantifying biodiversity: procedures and pitfalls in the measurement comparison of species richness. Ecol Lett 4: 379-391.. In this case, we used the Chao 2 and first order Jackknife richness estimators.

Similarity in meliponini species between edges was evaluated using the Bray-Curtis similarity coefficient and the grouping analysis (Unweighted Pair Group Method with Average - UPGMA) (Magurran 2011MAGURRAN AE. 2011. Medindo a Diversidade Biológica. Curitiba: UFPR, 261 p.). These data were also used for an evaluation of the effects that the distances between edges, relief slopes, plant typologies and altitudes between edges can have in the approximation or distancing of these areas, regarding the similarity of the melipofauna. The Bray-Curtis coefficient of similarity and UPGMA were also used to investigate the sharing of floral resources among bees.

RESULTS

Bee species richness

Sampling of stingless bees collected 1,346 specimens of 20 species distributed in 12 generic taxa (Table I). The most species-rich genera were Frieseomelitta, Scaptotrigona and Trigona, each with three species.

Samplings per edge corresponded in F1 to 350 individuals, ten species and eight genera; in F2, to 256 individuals, nine species and eight genera; in F3, 436 individuals, 13 species and nine genera; and in F4, to 304 individuals, ten species and seven genera (Table I). The analysis of the collector curve suggests that, with the exception of the F4 edge, the other areas reached sampling sufficiency (Fig. 2). In this case, the estimation of the number of bee species of the richness estimators did not show a discrepancy between the number of species collected and the estimated number of species for F1 (Chao = 10.12, Jackknife 1 = 10.94), F2 (Chao = 8, Jackknife 1 = 8) and F3 (Chao = 13.16, Jackknife 1 = 13.94), therefore, there was sampling sufficiency for these edges. However, there was discrepancy between these data for F4 (Chao = 14.25, Jackknife 1 = 12.83).

Figure 2
Monthly accumulation curve representing the effort of collecting meliponini bees in the edges of four forest fragments located in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará.

In addition to the 12 species of meliponini bees recorded by Ducke (1908DUCKE A. 1908. Cotribution à la connaissance de la faune hyménoptérologique du Nord-Est du Bresil – II. Hyménoptéres récolté dans l’Etat de Ceara en 1908. Rev Fr Entomol 27: 57-81., 1911DUCKE A. 1911. Cotribution à la connaissance de la faune hyménoptérologique du Nord-Est du Bresil – III. Hyménoptéres récolté dans l’Etat de Ceara en 1909 et supplements aux deux listes antérieures. Rev Fr Entomol 28: 78-122.), eight new records (Frieseomelitta francoi, Lestrimelitta cf. tropica, Oxytrigona tataira, Partamona ailyae, Plebeia aff. flavocincta, Scaptotrigona sp. 2, Scaptotrigona sp. 3, sp. nov., Trigona spinipes) were made for the Baturité Massif. Among these species, as a new species, Scaptotrigona sp. 3 (sp. nov.) (Table I).

Abundance of bees

In the evaluation of the absolute abundance of the stingless bees studied (Fig. 3), six species stood out M19 (M19 (Trigona spinipes), M17 (Trigona fulviventris), M14 (Scaptotrigona sp. 1), M18 (Trigona fuscipennis), M09 (Nannotrigona sp.) and M11 (Partamona ailyae), the first two considered the dominant species.

Figure 3
Absolute abundance of meliponini bee species registered in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará. M01-M20 (meliponini from 01 to 20) see Table I.

Similarity of bees

All the areas presented similarities above 30% in the composition of bee species. The edges F3 x F4 were the most similar, with a similarity of 64.15%, also emphasizing the edges F1 x F2 with a lower limit value of 31.14% (Table II). The edge F2 (Fig. 4) was the most distinct in relation to its fauna of meliponini bees.

Figure 4
Dendrogram of similarity (UPGMA) referring to the composition of the meliponini fauna of the four forest fragment edges sampled in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará.
Table II
Similarities (Bray-Curtis Coefficient) of the meliponini fauna between edges (F) related to distances between edges (Distance), mountain slopes (Slope), vegetation typologies (Vegetation) and altitudes (Altitude), in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará. Win (Windward), Lee (Leeward), fodm (dense ombrophilous forest), fedm (seasonal deciduous montane forest).

Sharing floral resources between bee species

The similarity analysis representing the affinity of the meliponini bee species for the same plant species (niche overlapping) revealed the formation of five distinct groups, considering a minimum similarity of 30% (Fig. 5). These groups involved 15 (75%) out of the 20 species of bees studied, where it was possible to distinguish clusters whose similarity ranged from 0 to 93.75%. The most representative affinity was between M01 and M15 (C. capitata and Scaptotrigona sp. 2), involving the latter percentage value.

Figure 5
Dendrogram of similarity (UPGMA) representing the affinity of the meliponini bee species for the same plant species found in the Baturité Massif, State of Ceará. M01-M20 (meliponini from 01 to 20) see Table I.

DISCUSSION

The results of the collector curve showed that the collected material had a good representativeness in meliponini bee species for the conditions of the Baturité massif. Generally, in the inventories of Apoidea in Brazil the number of occurrence of species of stingless bees has been considered low in several ecosystems. In areas of savannah-steppe (caatinga of the arid region, sensu IBGE 2012IBGE - INSTITUTO BRASILEIRO DE GEOGRAFIA E ESTATÍSTICA. 2012. Manual técnico da vegetação brasileira: sistema fitogeográfico, inventário das formações florestais campestres, técnicas e manejo das coleções botânicas, procedimentos para mapeamentos, 2ª ed., Rio de Janeiro: CDDI, 276 p.), for example, this number has not exceeded 11 species (Martins 1994MARTINS CF. 1994. Comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) da caatinga e do cerrado com elementos de campo rupestre do estado da Bahia, Brasil. Rev Nord Biol 9(2): 225-257., Aguiar & Martins 1997AGUIAR CMI & MARTINS CF. 1997. Abundância relativa, diversidade e fenologia de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) na caatinga, São João do Cariri, Paraíba, Brasil. Iheringia, Ser Zool 83: 151-163., Viana 1999VIANA BF. 1999. A comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) das dunas interiores do rio São Francisco, Bahia, Brasil. An Soc Entomol Bras 28(4): 635-645., Zanella 2000ZANELLA FCV. 2000. The bees of the Caatinga (Hymenoptara, Apoidea, Apiformes): a species list and comparative notes regarding their distribution. Apidologie 31: 579-592., 2003ZANELLA FCV. 2003. Abelhas da Estação Ecológica do Seridó (Serra Negra, RN): aportes ao conhecimento da diversidade, abundância e distribuição espacial das espécies da caatinga, In: Melo GAR & Santos IA (Eds), Apoidea Neotropica – Homenagem aos 90 anos de Jesus Santiago Moure, Criciuma: UNESC Edições, Criciúma-SC, p. 231-240., Aguiar 2003AGUIAR CML. 2003. Utilização de recursos florais por abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) em uma área de caatinga (Itatim, Bahia). Rev Bras Zool 20(3): 457-467., Aguiar & Zanella 2005AGUIAR CML & ZANELLA FCV. 2005. Estrutura da comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Apiformis) de uma área na margem do domínio da caatinga (Itatim, Bahia). Neotrop Entomol 34(1): 15-24., Batalha Filho et al. 2007BATALHA FILHO H, NUNES LA, PEREIRA DG & WALDSCHMIDT AM. 2007. Inventário da fauna de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) em uma área de caatinga da região de Jequié, Bahia. Biosci J 23(1): 24-29.). In different types of savanna (cerrado), grassy-woody steppe (clean field), semi-deciduous seasonal lowland forest (restinga) and ombrophilous forest (Atlantic forest), bee surveys recorded a maximum of only six species (Faria-Mucci et al. 2003FARIA-MUCCI GM, MEL MA & CAMPOS LAO. 2003. A fauna de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) e plantas utilizada como fontes de recursos florais, em um ecossistema de campos rupestres em Lavras Novas, Minas Gerais, Brasil. In: Melo GAR & Santos IA (Eds), Apoidea Neotropica – Homenagem aos 90 anos de Jesus Santiago Moure, Criciúma: UNESC Edições, Criciúma-SC, p. 241-256., Locatelli et al. 2004LOCATELLI E, MACHADO ICS & MEDEIROS P. 2004. Riqueza de abelhas e a flora apícola em um fragmento da mata serrana (Brejo de Altitude) em Pernambuco, Nordeste do Brasil. In: Pôrto KC, Cabral JJP & Tabarelli M (Eds), Brejos de altitude em Pernambuco e Paraíba – História Natural, Ecologia e Conservação, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/CID Ambiental, Brasília-DF, p. 153-177., Gonçalves & Melo 2005GONÇALVES RB & MELO GAR. 2005. A comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apidae) em uma área restrita de campo natural no Parque Estadual de Vila Velha, Paraná: diversidade, fenologia e fontes florais de alimento. Rev Bras Entomol 49(4): 557-571., Viana & Kleinert 2006VIANA BF & KLEINERT AMP. 2006. Structure of bee-flower in the coastal sand dune of Abaeté, northeastern Brazil. Rev Bras Entomol 50(1): 53-63., Milet-Pinheiro & Schlindwein 2008MILET-PINHEIRO P & SCHLINDWEIN C. 2008. Comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) e plantas em uma área do agreste pernambucano, Brasil. Rev Bras Entomol 52(4): 625-636., Siqueira et al. 2012SIQUEIRA ENL, BARTELLI BF, NASCIMENTO ART & NOGUEIRA-FERREIRA FH. 2012. Diversity and Nesting Substrates of Stingless Bees (Hymenoptera,Meliponina) in a Forest Remnant. Psyche 2012: 1-9.). However, in the savanna (cerrado), Nogueira-Ferreira & Augusto (2007)NOGUEIRA-FERREIRA FH & AUGUSTO SC. 2007. Amplitude de nicho e similaridade no uso de recursos florais por abelhas eussociais em uma área de cerrado. Biosci J 23(1): 45-51. recorded 18 species and, in the cerrado-Amazon transition area, Santos et al. (2004)SANTOS FM, CARVALHO CAL & SILVA RF. 2004. Diversidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) em uma área de transição Cerrado-Amazônia. Acta Amazonica 34(2): 319-328. recorded 20 species. Outside the Brazilian territory, in an altitude tropical forest in Costa Rica, Brosi (2009)BROSI BJ. 2009. The complex of social stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) to tropical deforestation. For Ecol Manage 258: 1830-1837. also recorded 20 species of meliponini bees.

According to Zanella & Martins (2003)ZANELLA FCV & MARTINS CF. 2003. Abelhas da caatinga: biogeografia, ecologia e conservação, In: Leal IR, Tabarelli M & Silva JMC (Eds), Ecologia e conservação da caatinga, Recife: Editora Universitária (UFPE), Recife-PE, p. 75-134., in the group Apiformes, the number of species per genus is almost always low, mainly in the caatinga, and this characteristic for the meliponini also does not escape the rule. These authors also argue that the low species richness of stingless bees found in these censuses may be associated with the local extinction of several species, as a consequence of the effects of habitat fragmentation. Some factors may contribute to this situation, among which are: reduced genetic diversity, caused by population reduction (Kerr & Vencovsky 1982KERR WE & VENCOVSKY R. 1982. Melhoramento genético em abelhas I. Efeito do número de colônias sobre o melhoramento. Brazil J Genet 5: 279-285.); the lack of trophic resources in general, and especially those that “stimulate” the food and storage dynamics of these products by the colonies, as would be the case of plant species with mass flowering (Bawa 1980BAWA KS. 1980. Evolution of dioecy in flowering plants. Ann Ver Ecol Syst 11: 15-39., 1990BAWA KS. 1990. Plant-pollinator interactions in tropical rainforest. Annu Ver Ecol Syst 21: 399-422., 1994BAWA KS. 1994. Pollinators of tropical dioecious angiosperms: a reassessment? No, not yet. Am J Bot 81: 456-460., Ramalho 1998RAMALHO M. 1998. Os meliponíneos na floresta atlântica: efeitos potenciais da pressão de forrageio sobre sistemas reprodutivos de árvores com floradas maciças. In: Anais do III Encontro sobre Abelhas, Ribeirão Preto. Ribeirão Preto: USP, p. 75-81., Monteiro & Ramalho 2010MONTEIRO D & RAMALHO M. 2010. Abelhas generalistas (Meliponina) e o sucesso reprodutivo de Stryphnodendron pulcherrimum (Fabales: Mimosaceae) com florada em massa na Mata Atlântica, BA. Neotrop Entomol 39(4): 519-526.); and the lack of substrate for nesting, especially those related to arboreal cavities, where most species of meliponini bees establish their colonies (Samejima et al. 2004SAMEJIMA H, MARZUKI M, NAGAMITSU T & NAKASIZUKA T. 2004. The effects of human disturbance on a stingless bees community in a tropical rainforest. Biol Conserv 120: 577-587.).

The results of absolute abundance revealed the importance, in order of magnitude, of the species Trigona spinipes, Trigona fulviventris, Scaptotrigona sp. 1, Trigona fuscipennis, Nannotrigona sp. and Partamona ailyae. The dominant group, T. spinipes and T. fulviventris, is common in the Baturité Massif. The first species has a wide geographical distribution in this mountainous area and the second one occupies only the most humid environments at altitudes generally above 600 m. Both present colonies with large numbers of individuals that are generalists in the use of local trophic resources. In generic groups, such as Trigona and Scaptotrigona, some species generally present populous colonies that stand out for their ability in food collection and storage procedures. These species therefore have a generalist behavior and are widely distributed in their nesting environments (Roubik 1982ROUBIK DW. 1982. Ecological impact of africanized honeybees on native neotropical pollinators. In: Jaisson P (Eds), Social insects in the tropics, Paris: Université Paris- Nord, Paris, France, p. 233-247., Pacheco Filho et al. 2015).

The activity of T. spinipes in flowers of the various types of the Brazilian vegetation and its participation as a species of generalist preference for these resources has already been evaluated by authors such as Laroca (1970)LAROCA S. 1970. Contribuição para o conhecimento das relações entre abelhas e flores: coleta de pólen das anteras tubulares de certas Melastomataceae. Rev Flo 2: 69-74., Cortopassi-Laurino & Ramalho (1988)CORTOPASSI-LAURINO M & RAMALHO M. 1988. Pollen harvest by africanized Apis mellifera and Trigona spinipes em São Paulo: botanical and ecological views. Apidologie 19: 1-24., Wilms et al. (1996)WILMS W, IMPERATRIZ-FONSECA VL & ENGELS W. 1996.1996. Resource partitioning between highly eusocial bees and possible impact of the introduced africanized honey bee on native stingless bees in the brazilian atlantic rainforest. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 31: 137-151. and Pacheco Filho et al. (2015)PACHECO FILHO AJS, VEROLA CF, LIMA-VERDE LW & FREITAS BM. 2015. Bee-flower association in the Neotropics: implications to bee conservation and plant pollination. Apidologie 46: 530-541.. As for the abundance, the importance of this species has been observed in bee censuses in ecosystems such as savanna, savannah-steppe, ombrophilous forest and semideciduous seasonal lowland forest (Viana et al. 1997VIANA BF, KLEINERT AMP & IMPERATRIZ-FONSECA VL. 1997. Abundance and flower visits of bees in cerrado of Bahia, tropical Brazil. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 32(4): 212-219., Lorenzon et al. 2003LORENZON MCA, MATRANGOLO CAR & SCHOEREDER JH. 2003. Flora visitada pelas abelhas eussociais (Hymenoptera, Apidae) na serra da Capivara, em caatinga do sul do Piauí. Neotrop Entomol 32(1): 27-36., Locatelli et al. 2004LOCATELLI E, MACHADO ICS & MEDEIROS P. 2004. Riqueza de abelhas e a flora apícola em um fragmento da mata serrana (Brejo de Altitude) em Pernambuco, Nordeste do Brasil. In: Pôrto KC, Cabral JJP & Tabarelli M (Eds), Brejos de altitude em Pernambuco e Paraíba – História Natural, Ecologia e Conservação, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/CID Ambiental, Brasília-DF, p. 153-177., Aguiar & Zanella 2005AGUIAR CML & ZANELLA FCV. 2005. Estrutura da comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Apiformis) de uma área na margem do domínio da caatinga (Itatim, Bahia). Neotrop Entomol 34(1): 15-24., Viana & Kleinert 2006VIANA BF & KLEINERT AMP. 2006. Structure of bee-flower in the coastal sand dune of Abaeté, northeastern Brazil. Rev Bras Entomol 50(1): 53-63., Milet-Pinheiro & Schlindwein 2008MILET-PINHEIRO P & SCHLINDWEIN C. 2008. Comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) e plantas em uma área do agreste pernambucano, Brasil. Rev Bras Entomol 52(4): 625-636.). Likewise, research with T. fulviventris also revealed its generalist habit in the use of food resources and its abundance in more humid environments (Sierra & Pardo 2008SIERRA CIA & PARDO AHS. 2008. Abejas visitantes de Aspilia tenella (Kunth) S. F. Blake (Asteraceae): comportamiento de forrajeo y cargas polínicas. Rev Fac Nac Agr Medellín 61(2): 4576-4587., Oliveira et al. 2009OLIVEIRA FPM, ABSY ML & MIRANDA IS. 2009. Recurso polínico coletado por abelhas sem ferrão (Apidae, Meliponinae) em um fragmento de floresta na região de Manaus – Amazonas. Acta Amazonica 39(3): 505-518., Pacheco Filho et al. 2015PACHECO FILHO AJS, VEROLA CF, LIMA-VERDE LW & FREITAS BM. 2015. Bee-flower association in the Neotropics: implications to bee conservation and plant pollination. Apidologie 46: 530-541.).

The conditions of habitat degradation in immediate edges of fragments of various types of vegetation have particular environmental characteristics and were poorly evaluated until now, both in relation to fauna and flora. This fact has made it difficult, in particular, to investigate bees (Brosi et al. 2008BROSI BJ, DAILY GC, SHIH TM, OVIEDO F & DURAN G. 2008. The effects of forest fragmentation on bee communities in tropical country side. J Appl Ecol 45: 773-783.). In this sense, the whole dynamics of biological interactions undergoes deep changes that mainly affect the presence of stingless bees. In particular, this group of Apoidea depends on well-preserved fragments with abundant and seasonal trophic resources, as well as environments with adequate levels of relative humidity (Heithaus 1979HEITHAUS ER. 1979. Community structure of neotropical flower visiting bees and wasps: diversity and phenology. Ecology (N Y) 60: 675-691., Bierregaard et al. 1992, Murcia 1995MURCIA C. 1995. Edge effects in fragmented forests: implication for conservation. Trends Ecol Evol 10: 58-62., Antonini et al. 2003ANTONINI Y, ACCACIO GM, BRANT A, CABRAL BC, FONTENELLE JCR, NASCIMENTO MT, THOMAZINI APBW & THOMAZINI MJ. 2003. Efeitos da fragmentação sobre a biodiversidade – insetos. In: Rambaldi DM & Oliveira DAS (Eds), Fragmentação de ecossistemas: causas, efeitos sobre a biodiversidade e recomendações de políticas públicas, Ministério do Meio Ambiente, Brasília: MMA/SBF, Brasília-DF, p. 239-273., Brosi et al. 2008BROSI BJ, DAILY GC, SHIH TM, OVIEDO F & DURAN G. 2008. The effects of forest fragmentation on bee communities in tropical country side. J Appl Ecol 45: 773-783., Brosi 2009BROSI BJ. 2009. The complex of social stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) to tropical deforestation. For Ecol Manage 258: 1830-1837.).

The similarity between species of bees in these areas can therefore generate different interpretations due to these multiple influences. In this case, the preference that these species have for a given habitat is one of the preponderant factors, although several species have a ample spectrum of occupation in different environments, especially when these are connected by almost imperceptible continuus in the geographic space. In this context, the results suggest that the high similarity of the bee fauna between the different fragments studied, according to the environmental parameters listed in Table II, can be a consequence of the high plasticity that these bees present in the occupation of the different local environments and where they use, as source of resources, various plant species. In fact, Meliponini bees were already registered as a group capable of using floral resources of many species of different botanical families (Pacheco Filho et al. 2015PACHECO FILHO AJS, VEROLA CF, LIMA-VERDE LW & FREITAS BM. 2015. Bee-flower association in the Neotropics: implications to bee conservation and plant pollination. Apidologie 46: 530-541.).

Several factors are associated with the sharing of floral resources by stingless bees. In this sense, one major factor for the performance of this group of bees in the foraging processes is the presence of plant species with differentiated flowering strategies, especially those species that show mass flowering (Heithaus 1979HEITHAUS ER. 1979. Community structure of neotropical flower visiting bees and wasps: diversity and phenology. Ecology (N Y) 60: 675-691., Mantovani & Martins 1988MANTOVANI W & MARTINS FR. 1988. Variações fenológicas das espécies do cerrado da Reserva Biológica de Mogi Guaçu, estado de São Paulo. Rev Bras Bot 11: 101-112., Ramalho 1998RAMALHO M. 1998. Os meliponíneos na floresta atlântica: efeitos potenciais da pressão de forrageio sobre sistemas reprodutivos de árvores com floradas maciças. In: Anais do III Encontro sobre Abelhas, Ribeirão Preto. Ribeirão Preto: USP, p. 75-81., 2004RAMALHO M. 2004. Stingless bees and masss flowering trees in the canopy of Atlantic Forest: a tight relationship. Acta Bot Bras 18(1): 37-47.). A second reference directly includes the trophic habits of these bees, where the generalist feeding behavior is highlighted (Laroca 1970LAROCA S. 1970. Contribuição para o conhecimento das relações entre abelhas e flores: coleta de pólen das anteras tubulares de certas Melastomataceae. Rev Flo 2: 69-74., Roubik 1982ROUBIK DW. 1982. Ecological impact of africanized honeybees on native neotropical pollinators. In: Jaisson P (Eds), Social insects in the tropics, Paris: Université Paris- Nord, Paris, France, p. 233-247., Cortopassi-Laurino & Ramalho 1988CORTOPASSI-LAURINO M & RAMALHO M. 1988. Pollen harvest by africanized Apis mellifera and Trigona spinipes em São Paulo: botanical and ecological views. Apidologie 19: 1-24., Wilms et al. 1996WILMS W, IMPERATRIZ-FONSECA VL & ENGELS W. 1996.1996. Resource partitioning between highly eusocial bees and possible impact of the introduced africanized honey bee on native stingless bees in the brazilian atlantic rainforest. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 31: 137-151.). Some plant species of the Baturité Massif are classified according to the flowering strategies outlined above, thus standing out for the importance in the supply of food resources to the local Meliponini species (Lima-Verde et al. 2014LIMA-VERDE LW, LOIOLA MIB & FREITAS BM. 2014. Angiosperm flora used by meliponine guilds (Apidae, Meliponina) occurring at rainforest edges in the state of Ceará, Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 86: 1395-1409., op cit.). Among these, Spermacoce verticillata (Rubiaceae), Libidibia ferrea (Fabaceae), Serjania lethalis (Sapindaceae), Vernonanthura brasiliana (Asteraceae), Cynophalla flexuosa (Capparaceae), Senna splendida (Fabaceae) and Wedelia scaberrima (Asteraceae) were highlighted, some of which present the flowering strategies discussed above.

S. verticillata, for example, was the species that most attracted bees, 12 (60%) out of the 20 species of meliponini bees, possibly presenting a great adaptive plasticity in the four edge areas (Lima-Verde et al. 2014LIMA-VERDE LW, LOIOLA MIB & FREITAS BM. 2014. Angiosperm flora used by meliponine guilds (Apidae, Meliponina) occurring at rainforest edges in the state of Ceará, Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 86: 1395-1409., op cit.). This species is arranged in concentrated patches of individuals as representing, on the whole, an individual with massive flowering. Studies such as Wilms et al. (1996)WILMS W, IMPERATRIZ-FONSECA VL & ENGELS W. 1996.1996. Resource partitioning between highly eusocial bees and possible impact of the introduced africanized honey bee on native stingless bees in the brazilian atlantic rainforest. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 31: 137-151., Gonçalves & Melo (2005)GONÇALVES RB & MELO GAR. 2005. A comunidade de abelhas (Hymenoptera, Apidae) em uma área restrita de campo natural no Parque Estadual de Vila Velha, Paraná: diversidade, fenologia e fontes florais de alimento. Rev Bras Entomol 49(4): 557-571. and Viana et al. (2006)VIANA BF, SILVA FO & KLEINERT AMP. 2006. A flora apícola de uma área restrita de dunas litorâneas, Abaeté, Salvador, Bahia. Rev Bras Bot 29(1): 13-25. refer to this species as one of the resources sought by several species of bees in different ecosystems in Brazil.

CONCLUSIONS

The record of 20 species of meliponini bees for the Baturité Massif, with some species highly abundant, evidences to some extent the existence of forest fragments and areas of temporary matrix edges with conditions to maintain this rich bee fauna, both biologically and ecologically active.

The results show that the two plant typologies are generally important for the different species of local Meliponini bees, both informing the exclusiveness of a vegetation type for a particular species and relating the use of both environments to individual species. This allows, in a way, the understanding of part of the ecology of this group of bees in this mountain range.

In the current conditions of these remaining forest fragments, their immediate edges are relevant as environments that guarantee, temporally and spatially, complementary food resources for the local meliponini fauna. However, this situation suggests that inside these fragments there is a lack of floral resources, mainly from tree species, which are characterized by attractive blooms for these bees.

Otherwise, as biological indicators, this knowledge helps in the necessary decision-making, when managing these environments as a function of these bees, as well as facilitating the most appropriate management of colonies under a rational exploitation regime by beekeepers.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    17 Aug 2020
  • Date of issue
    2020

History

  • Received
    11 Dec 2018
  • Accepted
    31 Jan 2019
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