Pokorny T, Hannibal M, Quezada-Euan J. Javier G, Hedenström E, Sjöberg N, Bâng J, and Eltz T. 2013. Acquisition of species-specific perfume blends: Influence of habitat-dependent compound availability on odour choices of male orchid bees (Euglossa sp.) Oecologia 172:417–425.
Abstract
Male orchid bees (Euglossini, Apidae,
Hymenoptera) expose species-specific blends of volatile chemicals
(perfume bouquets) during their courtship display. The perfumes are
acquired by collecting fragrant substances from environmental sources,
which are then accumulated in specialised hind leg pouches. To balance
the perfume composition, the males need to find and collect the required
substances in specific relative amounts while facing seasonal, local or
habitat-dependent differences in compound availability.
Experience-dependent choice of odours, i.e. ‘learned avoidance’ of
recently collected components, has been proposed as the mechanism that
mediates the accumulation of the stereotypical compound ratios. In the
present study, we used the presence of certain compounds in male hind
leg pouches as proxy for the respective local compound availability, and
investigated whether differences in content are correlated with
differences in chemical choice assays. Our results suggest that volatile
availability differs between localities (n = 16) as well as habitats (n = 2; coastal vs. inland) across the Yucatán peninsula, Mexico, for both studied species. Male Euglossa dilemma
showed a pronounced preference for benzyl benzoate and eugenol at
locations where those compounds were rare in hind leg extracts, as
predicted by the learned avoidance model. No equivalent correlations
were found for Euglossa viridissima. This
is the first study to combine chemical analyses of perfumes with
bioassays of odour choice. It strengthens the view that negative
feedback from collected odours modifies future chemical choice and helps
males to acquire specific perfume blends.
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