Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains

Ceratina hieroglyphica nesting sites were located in dried tiny twigs of cashew trees, and the life stages were observed through periodical collection of nests. Nests were located in the pithy region up to a maximum of 20 cm deep, and individual cells of 3.5 4 mm were separated by partitions. In 201...

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Main Author: Kaliaperumal Vanitha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Apicultural Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jas-2019-0018
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spelling doaj-6317a1d045d5458a93107e41c741476e2021-09-06T19:41:31ZengSciendoJournal of Apicultural Science2299-48312019-12-0163222323210.2478/jas-2019-0018jas-2019-0018Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly TerrainsKaliaperumal Vanitha0ICARDirectorate of Cashew Research, Puttur 574 202, Karnataka, IndiaCeratina hieroglyphica nesting sites were located in dried tiny twigs of cashew trees, and the life stages were observed through periodical collection of nests. Nests were located in the pithy region up to a maximum of 20 cm deep, and individual cells of 3.5 4 mm were separated by partitions. In 2017, one hundred and two nests were collected, of which twenty-two had been abandoned. Older cells were at the bottom of nests, while young ones towards the entrance. Among the different stages, the most in the nests were adults (51.8%), followed by pupal stages. Periodical collection of nests and the observations on developmental stages of the bees indicated that the nesting period was found to occur between October and March. Each egg was laid on a pollen provision located in separate cells and the incubation period lasted for 3.1±0.29 days. The larval period and pupal period lasted for 8.4±0.63 days and 7.3±01.41 days, respectively. Adults survived up to fourteen days in lab conditions with 10% honey solution. Parasitoids, predators and pathogens recorded on this bee species are also presented here.https://doi.org/10.2478/jas-2019-0018behaviourbiologyceratina hieroglyphicanestparasitismpollen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaliaperumal Vanitha
spellingShingle Kaliaperumal Vanitha
Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
Journal of Apicultural Science
behaviour
biology
ceratina hieroglyphica
nest
parasitism
pollen
author_facet Kaliaperumal Vanitha
author_sort Kaliaperumal Vanitha
title Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
title_short Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
title_full Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
title_fullStr Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
title_full_unstemmed Nest Structure, Development and Natural Enemies of Ceratina hieroglyphica Smith, A Stem Nesting Bee Colonizing Cashew Trees in Hilly Terrains
title_sort nest structure, development and natural enemies of ceratina hieroglyphica smith, a stem nesting bee colonizing cashew trees in hilly terrains
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Apicultural Science
issn 2299-4831
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Ceratina hieroglyphica nesting sites were located in dried tiny twigs of cashew trees, and the life stages were observed through periodical collection of nests. Nests were located in the pithy region up to a maximum of 20 cm deep, and individual cells of 3.5 4 mm were separated by partitions. In 2017, one hundred and two nests were collected, of which twenty-two had been abandoned. Older cells were at the bottom of nests, while young ones towards the entrance. Among the different stages, the most in the nests were adults (51.8%), followed by pupal stages. Periodical collection of nests and the observations on developmental stages of the bees indicated that the nesting period was found to occur between October and March. Each egg was laid on a pollen provision located in separate cells and the incubation period lasted for 3.1±0.29 days. The larval period and pupal period lasted for 8.4±0.63 days and 7.3±01.41 days, respectively. Adults survived up to fourteen days in lab conditions with 10% honey solution. Parasitoids, predators and pathogens recorded on this bee species are also presented here.
topic behaviour
biology
ceratina hieroglyphica
nest
parasitism
pollen
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jas-2019-0018
work_keys_str_mv AT kaliaperumalvanitha neststructuredevelopmentandnaturalenemiesofceratinahieroglyphicasmithastemnestingbeecolonizingcashewtreesinhillyterrains
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