Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae

In bees, most of the comparative studies linking the sensory system and behavior were performed in social species. Here, we describe the morphology of antennal sensilla in solitary and cleptoparasitic bees of Apinae and Nomadinae. The external and internal structure of sensilla and setae as well as...

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Autores principales: Galvani, G.L., González-Vaquero, R.A., Guerra-Navarro, C., Settembrini, B.P.
Formato: JOUR
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bee
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00448435_v48_n4_p437_Galvani
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spelling todo:paper_00448435_v48_n4_p437_Galvani2023-10-03T14:51:48Z Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae Galvani, G.L. González-Vaquero, R.A. Guerra-Navarro, C. Settembrini, B.P. antennal morphology dimorphism olfaction sensilla ultrastructure antenna bee behavioral ecology comparative study host-parasite interaction morphology olfaction sensory system sexual dimorphism ultrastructure Apidae Apinae Apoidea Nomadinae In bees, most of the comparative studies linking the sensory system and behavior were performed in social species. Here, we describe the morphology of antennal sensilla in solitary and cleptoparasitic bees of Apinae and Nomadinae. The external and internal structure of sensilla and setae as well as their distribution in flagella were studied in detail in two different host-cleptoparasitic associations. In addition, taking into account the presence of pores, the distribution of sensilla was compared in females and males of 39 species of these subfamilies. It was found that males of non-parasitic bees showed a higher number of multiporous sensilla. Females had more uniporous and nonporous sensilla than males. Cleptoparasitic bees showed a low diversity in types of sensilla and no sexual dimorphism in number. The pattern of sensilla in males and their cleptoparasitic females was discussed in the context of their ecological roles. © 2017, INRA, DIB and Springer-Verlag France. Fil:Galvani, G.L. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:González-Vaquero, R.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Settembrini, B.P. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00448435_v48_n4_p437_Galvani
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic antennal morphology
dimorphism
olfaction
sensilla ultrastructure
antenna
bee
behavioral ecology
comparative study
host-parasite interaction
morphology
olfaction
sensory system
sexual dimorphism
ultrastructure
Apidae
Apinae
Apoidea
Nomadinae
spellingShingle antennal morphology
dimorphism
olfaction
sensilla ultrastructure
antenna
bee
behavioral ecology
comparative study
host-parasite interaction
morphology
olfaction
sensory system
sexual dimorphism
ultrastructure
Apidae
Apinae
Apoidea
Nomadinae
Galvani, G.L.
González-Vaquero, R.A.
Guerra-Navarro, C.
Settembrini, B.P.
Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
topic_facet antennal morphology
dimorphism
olfaction
sensilla ultrastructure
antenna
bee
behavioral ecology
comparative study
host-parasite interaction
morphology
olfaction
sensory system
sexual dimorphism
ultrastructure
Apidae
Apinae
Apoidea
Nomadinae
description In bees, most of the comparative studies linking the sensory system and behavior were performed in social species. Here, we describe the morphology of antennal sensilla in solitary and cleptoparasitic bees of Apinae and Nomadinae. The external and internal structure of sensilla and setae as well as their distribution in flagella were studied in detail in two different host-cleptoparasitic associations. In addition, taking into account the presence of pores, the distribution of sensilla was compared in females and males of 39 species of these subfamilies. It was found that males of non-parasitic bees showed a higher number of multiporous sensilla. Females had more uniporous and nonporous sensilla than males. Cleptoparasitic bees showed a low diversity in types of sensilla and no sexual dimorphism in number. The pattern of sensilla in males and their cleptoparasitic females was discussed in the context of their ecological roles. © 2017, INRA, DIB and Springer-Verlag France.
format JOUR
author Galvani, G.L.
González-Vaquero, R.A.
Guerra-Navarro, C.
Settembrini, B.P.
author_facet Galvani, G.L.
González-Vaquero, R.A.
Guerra-Navarro, C.
Settembrini, B.P.
author_sort Galvani, G.L.
title Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
title_short Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
title_full Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
title_fullStr Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
title_full_unstemmed Antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of Apidae
title_sort antennal sensilla of cleptoparasitic and non-parasitic bees in two subfamilies of apidae
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00448435_v48_n4_p437_Galvani
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AT guerranavarroc antennalsensillaofcleptoparasiticandnonparasiticbeesintwosubfamiliesofapidae
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