# Oligolecty

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{{Short description|Pollinators with a narrow preference for pollen sources}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}
[[File:Andrena Subgenus Gonandrena.jpg|thumb|The [dogwood andrena](/source/dogwood_andrena), ''[Andrena](/source/Andrena)'' Subgenus ''Gonandrena'', oligolectic on dogwoods]]

The term '''oligolecty''' is used in [pollination](/source/pollination) ecology to refer to [bee](/source/bee)s that exhibit a narrow, specialized preference for [pollen](/source/pollen) sources, typically to a single family or [genus](/source/genus) of flowering plants. The preference may occasionally extend broadly to multiple genera within a single plant family, or be as narrow as a single plant species. When the choice is very narrow, the term ''monolecty'' is sometimes used, originally meaning a single plant species but recently broadened to include examples where the host plants are related members of a single genus.<ref>Cane, J.H. (2020) ''A brief review of monolecty in bees and benefits of a broadened definition''. Apidologie 2020 DOI: 10.1007/s13592-020-00785-y</ref> The opposite term is ''[polylectic](/source/polylectic)'' and refers to species that collect pollen from a wide range of species. The most familiar example of a polylectic species is the domestic [honey bee](/source/honey_bee).

Oligolectic pollinators are often called '''oligoleges''' or simply '''specialist pollinators''', and this behavior is especially common in the bee families [Andrenidae](/source/Andrenidae) and [Halictidae](/source/Halictidae), though there are thousands of species in hundreds of genera, in essentially all known bee families; in certain areas of the world, such as deserts, oligoleges may represent half or more of all the resident bee species.<ref name="Michener">Michener, C.D. (2007) ''The Bees of the World'', 2nd Edition, Johns Hopkins University Press; pp. 19–21.</ref> Attempts have been made to determine whether a narrow host preference is due to an inability of the bee [larva](/source/larva)e to digest and develop on a variety of pollen types, or a limitation of the adult bee's learning and perception (i.e., they simply do not recognize other flowers as potential food sources), and most of the available evidence suggests the latter. However, a few plants whose pollen contains toxic substances (e.g., ''[Toxicoscordion](/source/Toxicoscordion)'' and related genera in the [Melanthieae](/source/Melanthieae)) are visited by oligolectic bees, and these may fall into the former category. The evidence from large-scale phylogenetic analyses of bee evolution suggests that, for most groups of bees, oligolecty is the ancestral condition and polylectic lineages arose from among those ancestral specialists.<ref name="Michener" />

There are some cases where oligoleges collect their host plant's pollen as larval food but, for various reasons, rarely or never actually pollinate the flowers. A well-studied example is the relationship between the [yellow passionflower](/source/Passiflora_lutea) (''Passiflora lutea'') and the [passionflower bee](/source/Anthemurgus) (''Anthemurgus passiflorae'') in [Texas](/source/Texas).<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Neff|first1=John L.|last2=Rozen|first2=Jerome G.|date=1995|title=Foraging and nesting biology of the bee Anthemurgus passiflorae (Hymenoptera, Apoidea), descriptions of its immature stages, and observations on its floral host (Passifloraceae).|hdl=2246/3659|url=http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/3659|language=en-US|access-date=28 November 2020|archive-date=24 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210124071109/http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/3659|url-status=live|journal=American Museum Novitates|issue=3138}}</ref>

==Further reading==
*Proctor, M., Yeo, P. & Lack, A. (1996). ''The Natural History of Pollination''. Timber Press, Portland, OR. {{ISBN|0-88192-352-4}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Wiktionary}}

Category:Ecology
Category:Pollination

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