Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) reveals high diversity of setae on the hind tibiae and basitarsi of Peruvian Stingless Bees (Apidae: Meliponini)
Marilena Marconi, Carlos Daniel Vecco-Giove, Javier Ormeño Luna, Agustín Cerna Mendoza, Emiliano Mancini, Andrea Di Giulio

TL;DR
This study uses SEM to examine the diversity of setae on hind legs of Peruvian stingless bees, revealing adaptations linked to their foraging behaviors.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed comparative analysis of setae and pollen-handling structures in multiple Peruvian stingless bee species.
Findings
Stingless bees show high diversity in setae types, with some structures conserved and others species-specific.
Species that no longer forage on flowers exhibit simplified setae and lack pollen-handling structures.
Trigona cf. hypogea has the highest setae diversity and retains most pollen-handling structures.
Abstract
Stingless bees belong to the group of corbiculate bees, all characterized by the presence of a corbicula, a specialized structure of the hind tibia used for pollen collection. This group exhibits significant variation in foraging behavior, from flower-visiting foragers to kleptoparasites and obligate necrophagous. So far, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies have been mainly focused on the hind leg setae of Apis spp. and Bombus spp. Here, we performed a comparative morphological analysis of the setae and the pollen handling structures in the hind tibiae and basitarsi of seven stingless bee species: the floral pollen collector bees Melipona cf. eburnea, Partamona testacea, Scaura cf. latitarsis, Trigonisca cf. atomaria, Trigona dallatorreana, the robber bee Lestrimelitta sp. and the obligate necrophagous Trigona cf. hypogea, collected in Peruvian forests in 2020. The setae were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · Insect and Pesticide Research
