SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.53 issue1The Hydro-social Cycle of Urban Rivers: waterscape Transformations to the Hydro Landscape of San Luis Potosí, MéxicoPreliminary Assessment of the Influence of the Agricultural Area to the Quality of Water in the Dulce Gulf, Costa Rica author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

Share


Revista de Ciencias Ambientales

On-line version ISSN 2215-3896Print version ISSN 1409-2158

Abstract

BARQUERO-ELIZONDO, Ana Isabel et al. Association Between Stingless Bees (Apidae, Meliponini) and the Dry Forest Flora in the Northern Region of Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Ciencias Ambientales [online]. 2019, vol.53, n.1, pp.70-91. ISSN 2215-3896.  http://dx.doi.org/10.15359/rca.53-1.4.

Stingless bees are important pollinators in tropical and subtropical regions; they are associated with the flora that provides them with food, sites for nesting, resins, sap and exudates. We sought to determine the association between bees and flora in the cerro El Hacha sector (intervened primary forest) and the Pocosol sector (secondary forest) of the Guanacaste National Park, where the nests were inventoried in 33 plots of 20 x 20 m². Pollen from plants was collected within the plots and around the nests (radius 500 m); also, we collected and analyzed corbicular charges of pollen from bees trapped with entomological nets at the entrance of the nests. In the cerro El Hacha sector, pollen was collected from three nests of Scaptotrigona pectoralis and in the Pocosol sector we collected pollen from two nests of Trigona fulviventris. A density of 4.43 nests / ha-1 was obtained from the species: Tetragonisca angustula, Tetragona ziegleri, Plebeia frontalis and Trigona fulviventris. The nests were found in the trunks of trees, with preference for Quercus oleoides, where 50 % of them were found. The food plants used by S. pectoralis in cerro El Hacha were: Cupania guatemalensis (30 %), Byrsonima crassifolia (21 %) and Cedrela odorata (15 %). While for T. fulviventris in the Pocosol sector the most important plants were Baltimora recta (26 %), Dorstenia contrajerva (9 %) and Desmodium sp. (9 %). The important role played by the tree species Quercus oleoides for the conservation of the populations of these insects is evident.

Keywords : Native bees; pollination; tropical forest.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )