Xylocopa pubescens | |
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Female | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Apidae |
Subfamily: | Xylocopinae |
Tribe: | Xylocopini |
Genus: | Xylocopa |
Species: | X. pubescens |
Binomial name | |
Xylocopa pubescens |
Xylocopa pubescens is a species of large carpenter bee. Females form nests by excavation with their mandibles, often in dead or soft wood. X. pubescens is commonly found in areas extending from Southeast Asia to Northeast and West Africa. It must reside in these warm climates because it requires a minimum ambient temperature of 18 degrees Celsius in order to forage.
A common area of study in X. pubescens is its dominance hierarchy and guarding behavior. Colonies start and end with female takeover, either by daughters of the dominant female or by foreign intruders. There is only one reproductively active female in a colony at a time who suppresses the reproduction of other females in the nest. Males hold individual territories which females enter to mate. When an intruder enters another male's territory, the male responds aggressively.
X. pubescens is polylectic, so it forages on many species of plants. It forages on some plants for nectar when preparing bee bread during ontogenesis and forages on others for pollen to feed offspring. Pheromones from Dufour's gland are vital to mark flowers previously visited and also to mark nests so that the foraging bees know where to return.X. pubescens is known to be an effective pollinator, often more effective than honeybees, but it is not commonly used in today's agricultural settings.
Xylocopa pubescens is in the order Hymenoptera, which includes bees, wasps, ants, and sawflies, and in the family Apidae, which is a large bee family. Xylocopa pubescens belongs to the Xylocopa ("wood chopper") genus in the subfamily Xylocopinae, a genus composed of over 400 species of large carpenter bees. It is a member of the subgenus Koptortosoma, which is the largest Xylocopa subgenus and is widely distributed with over 200 species.X. pubescens is polyphyletic and comes from a sister lineage of Mesotrichia. In scientific Greek, Xylocopa pubescens literally means "wood chopper covered with erect hairs".