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Amegilla

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Amegilla is a large genus of bees in the tribe Anthophorini. The genus occurs all around the world, but very few live above 45° North.[1] Amegilla are associated with arid and subarid biomes, matorrals, steppes, sub-deserts and deserts.[2]

Amegilla are generally medium-sized to very large bees of robust form.[3] The body and legs are hairy, and the tongue and proboscis are long.[3] All Amegilla species burrow to make nests,[3] hence they are commonly referred to as "digger bees". Several species have blue metallic bands on the abdomen, and are referred to as "blue-banded bees".

All Amegilla are solitary species. They are very fast, agile flyers, and because of this, some taxa are close to impossible to catch.[2] Females are adept at buzz-pollination, and some species have proven or potential value as pollinators of greenhouse tomatoes.[4]

Selected species

Ecology

Pollination

Several Amegilla species, specifically Amegilla nigritar and Amegilla zonata, pollinate the orchid species Phalaenopsis pulcherrima.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Atlas Hymenoptera". www.atlashymenoptera.net. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b Denis Michez, Pierre Rasmont, Michaël Terzo [et autres] (2019). Abeilles d'Europe. Vol. 1. Verrières-le-Buisson: NAP éditions. ISBN 978-2-913688-33-9. OCLC 1140375362.
  3. ^ a b c Houston, Terry (August 2018). A Guide to Native Bees of Australia. CSIRO Publishing. pp. 216–223. ISBN 9781486304066.
  4. ^ Hogendoorn, K; Gross, CL; Sedgley, M; Keller, MA (2006). "Increased Tomato Yield Through Pollination by Native Australian Amegilla chlorocyanea (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae)". Journal of Economic Entomology. 99 (3): 828–833. doi:10.1093/jee/99.3.828. PMID 16813318 – via Oxford Academic.
  5. ^ Pramanik, D., Dorst, N., Meesters, N. et al. Evolution and development of three highly specialized floral structures of bee-pollinated Phalaenopsis species. EvoDevo 11, 16 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13227-020-00160-z
  6. ^ Hu, X., Lan, S., Song, X., Yang, F., Zhang, Z., Peng, D., & Ren, M. (2021). "Genetic divergence between two sympatric ecotypes of Phalaenopsis pulcherrima on Hainan island." Diversity, 13(9), 446.
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Amegilla: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Amegilla is a large genus of bees in the tribe Anthophorini. The genus occurs all around the world, but very few live above 45° North. Amegilla are associated with arid and subarid biomes, matorrals, steppes, sub-deserts and deserts.

Amegilla are generally medium-sized to very large bees of robust form. The body and legs are hairy, and the tongue and proboscis are long. All Amegilla species burrow to make nests, hence they are commonly referred to as "digger bees". Several species have blue metallic bands on the abdomen, and are referred to as "blue-banded bees".

All Amegilla are solitary species. They are very fast, agile flyers, and because of this, some taxa are close to impossible to catch. Females are adept at buzz-pollination, and some species have proven or potential value as pollinators of greenhouse tomatoes.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN