Flower Scent of Floral Oil-Producing Lysimachia punctata as Attractant for the Oil-Bee Macropis fulvipes
Abstract
Most flowers offer nectar and/or pollen as a reward for pollinators. However, some plants are known to produce mostly fatty oil in the flowers, instead of nectar. This oil is exclusively collected by specialized oil-bees, the pollinators of the oil-plants. Little is known about chemical communication in this pollination system, especially how the bees find their hosts. We collected the floral and vegetative scent emitted by oil-producing Lysimachia punctata by dynamic headspace, and identified the compounds by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Thirty-six compounds were detected in the scent samples, several of which were flower-specific. Pentane extracts of flowers and floral oil were tested on Macropis fulvipes in a biotest. Flower and oil extracts attracted the bees, and some of the compounds identified are seldom found in the floral scent of other plants; these may have been responsible for the attraction of the bees.
- Publication:
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Journal of Chemical Ecology
- Pub Date:
- February 2007
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2007JCEco..33..441D
- Keywords:
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- Floral and vegetative scent;
- Dynamic headspace;
- GC-MS;
- Oil-flower oil-bee pollination system;
- Lysimachia punctata;
- Macropis fulvipes;
- Flight cage;
- Biotest