Invading 'killer bees' may increase food supplies for native bees
Washington, October 2 (ANI): A long-term study of the Africanized bee invasion of Mexico's Yucatan shows that invading 'killer bees' may actually increase food resources for native bees.
Aggressive African bees were accidentally released in Brazil in 1957.
As "killer bees" spread northward, David Roubik, staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, began a 17-year study that revealed that Africanized bees caused less damage to native bees than changes in the weather and may have increased the availability of their food plants.
Scientists feared that dangerous swarms of Africanized bees would compete with native bees.
Roubik took on the daunting task of sorting out the role of invading pollinators in tropical forests.
In 1988, he set up bee traps in Sian Ka'an Biosphere Reserve-a vast area of mature tropical rainforest in Quintana Roo state on the Mexican Yucatan-with Rogel Villanueva-Gutiirrez, professor at the Colegio de la Frontera del Sur in Mexico.
Africanized bees arrived in 1989.
"Our long view of the invasion shows that bees maintain higher-order evolutionary relationships with plants despite ups and downs in bee species within families," said Roubik.
"Evolutionary relationships between bees and flowers, along with their flowering schedules, may be the fundamental currency that maintains this community," he added.
Pollen from each plant species has a unique shape.
Researchers compared pollen on bees in traps to pollen from flowers in the forest to determine which plants the bees were visiting.
Over the next 17 years, a severe drought and three hurricanes devastated native bees, but their populations rebounded each time.
Africanized bees took over pollination of two plant families that had been important food sources for native bees: the cashew family and the spurge family.
However, Pouteria, one of the plants native bees prefer, became more common. A few rare species of bees disappeared from traps later in the study.
Roubik cautions that native populations in less diverse areas might be less resilient to invasions.
"Basically, we're seeing 'scramble competition' as bees replace a lost source of pollen with pollen from a related plant species hat has a similar flowering peak-in less-biodiverse, unprotected areas, bees would not have the same range of options to turn to," e said. (ANI)
-
Gold Rate Today 16 March 2026: Fresh IBJA Gold Prices; Tanishq, Malabar, Joyalukkas, Kalyan Jewellers Rates -
Gold Rate Today 17 March 2026: IBJA Bullion Update; Tanishq, Malabar, Joyalukkas, Kalyan Jewellery Prices -
What Did Aadhav Arjuna Say About Rajinikanth & What Is The Controversy All About? Superstar Reacts -
TVK Candidate List For Tamil Nadu Election: Vijay Likely From Velachery; Bussy Anand For T Nagar -
Gold Silver Rate Today, 16 March 2026: City-Wise Prices As MCX Gold Slips, Silver Near Monthly Lows -
Eid-ul-Fitr 2026 Holiday: When Will Schools Remain Closed? Expected Date, Time and Other Details -
Gold Silver Rate Today, 17 March 2026: City-Wise Prices, MCX Signals Weakness in Gold, Silver Markets -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 17 March 2026: Gold Stays Expensive, Silver Remains Above Key Mark -
Bangalore Gold Silver Rate Today, 16 March 2026: Gold and Silver Prices Fall as Precious Metals Turn Volatile -
West Bengal Elections Predictions: Is BJP Ready To End Mamata's Rule? Check Pre Poll Survey Report -
Trisha To Marry Thalapathy Vijay After 2026 TN Polls? Actress’ Mother Drops Hint Amid Actor’s Divorce Case -
BJP Candidates List For West Bengal Elections 2026: Suvendu Adhikari Gets Dual Seat as Party Releases 144-Name












Click it and Unblock the Notifications