TY - JOUR
T1 - The corbiculate bees arose from New World oil-collecting bees
T2 - Implications for the origin of pollen baskets
AU - Martins, Aline C.
AU - Melo, Gabriel A.R.
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
N1 - Funding Information:
For help in the lab, we thank M. Silber; for bees we thank A. Aguiar, C. Rasmussen, L.C. Rocha-Filho, O. Mielke, M. Casagrande, D. Dolibaina, D. Moura, M. Hermes, K. Ramos, F. Vivallo, P. Grossi, D. Parizotto and E. Carneiro; for museum loans we thank: BBSL: Bee Biology and Systematic Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Logan, Utah, United States; CAS: California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California, United States; C.R.: Claus Rasmussen Collection, Aarhus, Denmark; ECO-TAP: Colección de insectos en El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Unidad Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico; UB: Coleção de insetos da Universidade de Brasilia, Brasilia, Distrito Federal, Brazil; J.L, Neff: Central Texas Melittological Institute, Austin, Texas, United States; and Alicia Sérsic, personal collection; for help with images Gabriel Rezende and Oscar Pérez; and for bee photographs A. Aguiar. GARM thanks Brunno Bueno and Ricardo Ayala for help with field work in Mexico. AM thanks the International Society of Hymenopterists for an Endowment Student Award (2012), the CNPq for a Ph.D scholarship ( 148685/2010-2 ), and the DAAD/CAPES ( 12374/12-1 ) program for financing her stay in Munich. The study was partially financed by CNPq (Grant 480129/2011-8 ).
PY - 2014/11
Y1 - 2014/11
N2 - The economically most important group of bees is the "corbiculates", or pollen basket bees, some 890 species of honeybees (Apis), bumblebees (Bombus), stingless bees (Meliponini), and orchid bees (Euglossini). Molecular studies have indicated that the corbiculates are closest to the New World genera Centris, with 230 species, and Epicharis, with 35, albeit without resolving the precise relationships. Instead of concave baskets, these bees have hairy hind legs on which they transport pollen mixed with floral oil, collected with setae on the anterior and middle legs. We sampled two-thirds of all Epicharis, a third of all Centris, and representatives of the four lineages of corbiculates for four nuclear gene regions, obtaining a well-supported phylogeny that has the corbiculate bees nested inside the Centris/. Epicharis clade. Fossil-calibrated molecular clocks, combined with a biogeographic reconstruction incorporating insights from the fossil record, indicate that the corbiculate clade arose in the New World and diverged from Centris 84 (72-95). mya. The ancestral state preceding corbiculae thus was a hairy hind leg, perhaps adapted for oil transport as in Epicharis and Centris bees. Its replacement by glabrous, concave baskets represents a key innovation, allowing efficient transport of plant resins and large pollen/nectar loads and freeing the corbiculate clade from dependence on oil-offering flowers. The transformation could have involved a novel function of Ubx, the gene known to change hairy into smooth pollen baskets in Apis and Bombus.
AB - The economically most important group of bees is the "corbiculates", or pollen basket bees, some 890 species of honeybees (Apis), bumblebees (Bombus), stingless bees (Meliponini), and orchid bees (Euglossini). Molecular studies have indicated that the corbiculates are closest to the New World genera Centris, with 230 species, and Epicharis, with 35, albeit without resolving the precise relationships. Instead of concave baskets, these bees have hairy hind legs on which they transport pollen mixed with floral oil, collected with setae on the anterior and middle legs. We sampled two-thirds of all Epicharis, a third of all Centris, and representatives of the four lineages of corbiculates for four nuclear gene regions, obtaining a well-supported phylogeny that has the corbiculate bees nested inside the Centris/. Epicharis clade. Fossil-calibrated molecular clocks, combined with a biogeographic reconstruction incorporating insights from the fossil record, indicate that the corbiculate clade arose in the New World and diverged from Centris 84 (72-95). mya. The ancestral state preceding corbiculae thus was a hairy hind leg, perhaps adapted for oil transport as in Epicharis and Centris bees. Its replacement by glabrous, concave baskets represents a key innovation, allowing efficient transport of plant resins and large pollen/nectar loads and freeing the corbiculate clade from dependence on oil-offering flowers. The transformation could have involved a novel function of Ubx, the gene known to change hairy into smooth pollen baskets in Apis and Bombus.
KW - Ancestral state reconstruction
KW - Corbiculate bees
KW - Divergence dating
KW - Molecular phylogeny
KW - Oil-collecting apparatus
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84906502537
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2014.07.003
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2014.07.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 25034728
AN - SCOPUS:84906502537
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 80
SP - 88
EP - 94
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
IS - 1
ER -