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''Bombus pensylvanicus'', the American bumblebee, is a threatened species of
bumblebee A bumblebee (or bumble bee, bumble-bee, or humble-bee) is any of over 250 species in the genus ''Bombus'', part of Apidae, one of the bee families. This genus is the only extant group in the tribe Bombini, though a few extinct related gener ...
native to North America. It occurs in eastern
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, throughout much of the Eastern
United States The United States of America (U.S.A. or USA), commonly known as the United States (U.S. or US) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It consists of 50 states, a federal district, five major unincorporated territorie ...
, and much of
Mexico Mexico (Spanish: México), officially the United Mexican States, is a country in the southern portion of North America. It is bordered to the north by the United States; to the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; to the southeast by Guatema ...
.Hatfield, R., et al. 2015
''Bombus pensylvanicus''.
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 09 March 2016.
Once the most prevalent bumblebee in the southern United States, populations of ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' have decreased significantly in recent years, including in its scientific namesake state of
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania (; ( Pennsylvania Dutch: )), officially the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is a state spanning the Mid-Atlantic, Northeastern, Appalachian, and Great Lakes regions of the United States. It borders Delaware to its southeast, ...
where its numbers are considered critically low. Overall, the population has dropped nearly 90% in just the last 20 years. ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' tends to live and nest in open farmland and fields. It feeds on several food plants, favoring sunflowers and clovers, and functions as a pollinator.


Taxonomy and phylogenetics

''Bombus pensylvanicus'' belongs to the order
Hymenoptera Hymenoptera is a large order (biology), order of insects, comprising the sawfly, sawflies, wasps, bees, and ants. Over 150,000 living species of Hymenoptera have been described, in addition to over 2,000 extinct ones. Many of the species are Par ...
(consisting of ants, wasps, bees, and sawflies), the family
Apidae Apidae is the largest family within the superfamily Apoidea, containing at least 5700 species of bees. The family includes some of the most commonly seen bees, including bumblebees and honey bees, but also includes stingless bees (also used for ...
(consisting of Cuckoo, Digger, Carpenter, Bumble, and Honeybees), the Subfamily
Apinae The Apinae are the subfamily that includes the majority of bees in the family Apidae. It includes the familiar " corbiculate" (pollen basket) bees—bumblebees, honey bees, orchid bees, stingless bees, Africanized bees, and the extinct genus '' ...
(consisting of Honey, Orchid, Bumble, Long-horned, and Digger Bees), and the genus ''
Bombus A bumblebee (or bumble bee, bumble-bee, or humble-bee) is any of over 250 species in the genus ''Bombus'', part of Apidae, one of the bee families. This genus is the only extant group in the tribe Bombini, though a few extinct related gener ...
'' (consisting of bumblebees)''.'' Within ''Bombus'', ''B. pensylvanicus'' belongs to the subgenus ''Thoracobombus'', which includes species such as '' Bombus armeniacus, Bombus pauloensis,
Bombus dahlbomii ''Bombus dahlbomii'', also known as the moscardón, is a species of bumblebee endemic to southern South American temperate forests. ''B. dahlbomii'' is one of the largest bee species in the world, with matured queens growing up to long.King, A. ...
,
Bombus fervidus ''Bombus fervidus'', the golden northern bumble bee or yellow bumblebee, is a species of bumblebee native to North America. It has a yellow-colored abdomen and thorax. Its range includes the North American continent, excluding much of the souther ...
, Bombus humilis,
Bombus morio ''Bombus morio'' is one of the few bumblebee species found in South America. These bees reside mainly in the forests of Brazil, nesting on the surface of the ground. They are one of the biggest species of bumblebee and are important pollinators. ...
, Bombus muscorum , Bombus pascuorum,
Bombus pomorum The apple humble-bee or apple bumblebee (''Bombus pomorum'') is a species of bumblebee. Description This bumblebee is black with a red tail, an oblong head, and a long proboscis. The male has pale hairs on the collar, scutellum, and first te ...
,
Bombus ruderarius ''Bombus ruderarius'', commonly known as the red-shanked carder bee or red-shanked bumblebee, is a species of bumblebee found in Eurasia. Description Though sometimes mistaken for ''Bombus lapidarius'', ''Bombus ruderarius'' varies slightly in ...
, Bombus sylvarum,'' and ''
Bombus transversalis ''Bombus transversalis'' is a bumblebee specifically native to the Amazon Basin. It is most notable for its surface level colonies which are built by the workers on the rainforest floor. Unlike its relatives, ''B. transversalis'' is able to thriv ...
.'' ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' is sometimes mistaken for ''B. terricola'' or ''B. auricomus,''Colla, S., et al
Bumble Bees of the Eastern United States.
US Forest Service and Pollinator Partnership. March, 2011.
but its closest relative is ''Bombus sonorus'', found in Mexico and Arizona. Scientists sometimes treat ''Bombus sonorus'' as a subspecies of ''Bombus pensylvanicus,'' although each species maintain differences in male genitalia''.'' Intermediate individuals of ''B. pensylvanicus'' and ''B. sonorus'' have been found in areas of geographic overlap, but further evidence is needed to distinguish whether ''B. sonorus'' is a subspecies of ''B. pensylvanicus.''


Description and identification

''Bombus pensylvanicus'' is a widespread species, characterized as long-tongued. In comparison to its similar species ''B. sonorus'', ''B. pensylvanicus'' has a darker color pattern and is located in the eastern United States. Characteristics of ''B. pensylvanicus'' include: a yellow thoracic dorsum, a black posterior, 3 initial alternating black and white tergal segments, a long and lanky malar space, and short hair. These characteristics resemble those of ''B. fervidus'' and ''B. auricomus,'' leading to confusion among species. ''B. pensylvanicus'' is similar in color and range to ''
Bombus fervidus ''Bombus fervidus'', the golden northern bumble bee or yellow bumblebee, is a species of bumblebee native to North America. It has a yellow-colored abdomen and thorax. Its range includes the North American continent, excluding much of the souther ...
''. In terms of characteristics within the hive, a larger queen measures 22–26 mm compared to worker at 13–19 mm. Males have an outward penis valve head with a broad banana shape, and often have extensive yellow on the thoracic dorsum posteriorly. While bees normally forage close to their nests, it has been observed that individuals can return from up to 1.5 miles away. Though there is likely individual variation in homing ability and the time it takes a bee to find its way back to the nest. The method utilized by the bees is most likely trial and error method, not a sixth sense or homing instinct because the bees maintained varying variation in time taken to return to the nest. Males become more common in late summer.


Intraspecific Variation

S.A. Cameron observed that bees of the genus ''
Bombus A bumblebee (or bumble bee, bumble-bee, or humble-bee) is any of over 250 species in the genus ''Bombus'', part of Apidae, one of the bee families. This genus is the only extant group in the tribe Bombini, though a few extinct related gener ...
'' tend to have a comparable morphology throughout their range, thus signifying that behavioral adaptations may play a large part in colonizing different habitats. Mimetic evolution is postulated to account for both interspecific and intraspecific variation in color pattern. Eastern North American ''B. pensylvanicus'' and western North American ''B. sonorus'' are taxa that have a similar morphology, but have distinct color patterns and different male genitalia. In areas where the two taxa overlap, there is genetic
introgression Introgression, also known as introgressive hybridization, in genetics is the transfer of genetic material from one species into the gene pool of another by the repeated backcrossing of an interspecific hybrid with one of its parent species. Intr ...
between ''B. sonorus'' and ''B. pensylvanicus'', suggesting that the two taxa may actually be conspecific (as they produce fertile offspring), and best considered as subspecies.


Distribution and habitat

''Bombus pensylvanicus'' ranges from the Eastern Great Plains to eastern and central US and southern Canada, and Mexico. The species has become rarer, declining in number mainly in northern parts of its range. ''B. pensylvanicus'' generally nests in fields of long grass, but may sometimes nest underground. The species utilizes bundles of hay or long grass to create sheltered nests above ground. Some nest in established crevices and burrows, such as old bird nests, rodent burrows, or in cinder blocks. This species has even been noted to nest in human made objects, like buckets or barns.


Colony cycle

''Bombus pensylvanicus'' maintains a reproductive cycle that it similar to other species of bumblebee. Environmental factors as well as accessibility of resources affects the cyclic advancement of the colony. The cycle begins in February and ends around November or December. Female bees can yield eggs without the need for mating, a process known as
haplodiploidy Haplodiploidy is a sex-determination system in which males develop from unfertilized eggs and are haploid, and females develop from fertilized eggs and are diploid. Haplodiploidy is sometimes called arrhenotoky. Haplodiploidy determines the sex ...
. Unfertilized eggs develop into males, whereas fertilized eggs develop into female workers or queen bees. The reproductive cycle begins in July/August, when a male mates with a freshly hatched queen. The fertilized queen stays in hibernation until spring of the next year, waiting for the optimal conditions to search for a nest. In March, the queen bee gathers pollen and nectar, as a source of nutrition and to build a wax pot, and establishes her colony. These colonies most likely arrange and initiate in February. Female workers develop through the pollen collected as it stimulates the ovaries to create eggs, which are fertilized from the males of year before. The queen continues to warm the eggs initially, then the eggs continue their life cycle of development: first larval stage, then pupae, and lastly adult female workers. The female workers care for the nest and eggs, whereas the queen lays eggs. This process of egg to adult bee takes about 4–5 weeks. Initial workers forage and increase the colony size by bringing resources for growth. Thus, workers that hatch later in the year, around midsummer, tend to be larger than initial worker bees. The hives continue to grow, and in late summer there can be more than 200 worker bees. At the point when the size of the hive is sufficient, the queen stops production of a chemical that prevents ovarian production of certain females leading to specify the production of queen bee eggs and male eggs. Certain female workers may produce their own eggs, but the queen will usually get rid of them. The constant battle between the queen and workers continue until late summer when the workers sting the queen to death. The cycle begins again in the winter as the queen bee eggs hatch and the worker bees die.


Colony Hierarchy

''B. pensylvanicus'' has a varying stability within its colony cycle. Queens are considered the dominant caste because they are usually the largest bees of the colony. As worker male bees grow larger in average wing length, they become the dominant caste as the number of queens decrease. Wing length of males vary depending upon the point of colony development. Initial males that found the colony tend to have a smaller wing length than the first or second generation of the colony. Food supply is scarce, at first, as the queen is the forager. Until July, the workers are the foraging caste and an enormous increase in body size is observed. The worker proportions decrease when reproductive males develop, representing a turning point in the colony, as male size increase until active bees develop to the size of a queen near November and December when the worker population dissipates. Queens maintain the least amount of standard deviation for average wing length and thus are the most stable caste in the colony. It is postulated that this is because queens are made in a short time span when colony resources have reached its threshold. The activity of ''B. pensylvanicus'' in a subtropical zone resemble that of species in temperate zones, maintaining periods where there are no active bees.


Interaction with other species


Predators

Although ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' maintains
aposematic Aposematism is the advertising by an animal to potential predators that it is not worth attacking or eating. This unprofitability may consist of any defences which make the prey difficult to kill and eat, such as toxicity, venom, foul taste o ...
coloration and defensive stinger, it faces many predators. Predation is likely to be caused by attack to gain the resources of the hive, which contains carbohydrate and protein abundant nectar, larvae, and pollen. Predators consist of mostly mammals such as skunks, bears, and raccoons. Furthermore, bumble bees are predated on by birds for food. Foragers are frequently predated by invertebrates. Crab spiders and cryptically colored ambush bugs ambush bees at flowers to catch them. Robber flies resemble bumble bees and clasp the bumble bees, insert them with enzymes, then eat their internal organs. '' Mallophora bomboides'' is a robber fly species that preys specifically on ''B. pensylvanicus'' and uses it as a model for
Batesian mimicry Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a predator of them both. It is named after the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates, after his work on bu ...
. Wasps, such as the
beewolf Beewolves (genus ''Philanthus''), also known as bee-hunters or bee-killer wasps, are solitary, predatory wasps, most of which prey on bees, hence their common name. The adult females dig tunnels in the ground for nesting, while the territorial m ...
species '' Philanthus bicinctus'', intercept bees then paralyze them with venom, using them to nourish the wasp’s larvae.
Assassin bugs The Reduviidae are a large cosmopolitan family of the order Hemiptera (true bugs). Among the Hemiptera and together with the Nabidae almost all species are terrestrial ambush predators: most other predatory Hemiptera are aquatic. The main exam ...
and
dragonflies A dragonfly is a flying insect belonging to the infraorder Anisoptera below the order Odonata. About 3,000 extant species of true dragonfly are known. Most are tropical, with fewer species in temperate regions. Loss of wetland habitat threa ...
are also common predators of the bee.


Parasites

Bumble bees are generally host to a diversity of
parasitoids In evolutionary ecology, a parasitoid is an organism that lives in close association with its host at the host's expense, eventually resulting in the death of the host. Parasitoidism is one of six major evolutionary strategies within parasi ...
in which the larvae grow inside the living host. The majority of parasitoids for bumble bees are flies and about 30 percent or more bees within the area can be infected. The process of parasitism consists of the fly attaching to the bee in flight and inserting her oviposits between the terga of the bee. The larval fly hatches within the bee host and develops by feeding on the host’s tissues. The bee lives for about two weeks before dying. The fly then pupates and spends the winter inside the bee, fully developed, before it emerges the following year. ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' is host to one "cuckoo" bumble bee species, ''B. variabilis''. Hibernating queen bumble bees are parasitized by a nematode worm, '' Sphaerularia bombi''. This parasite does not reduce life span, but instead causes the sterilization of the queen. It has been observed that affected queens forage two to three weeks later than those that are unaffected. Parasitic microorganisms also use bees as their host. Parasitic microorganisms’ effects may be lethal or sublethal. Pathogens may be transmitted within a colony or the bee may be infected at flowers. Tracheal mites (''
Locustacarus buchneri ''Locustacarus buchneri'' is a parasitic mite that lives in the respiratory air sacs of bumblebee A bumblebee (or bumble bee, bumble-bee, or humble-bee) is any of over 250 species in the genus ''Bombus'', part of Apidae, one of the bee fa ...
'') leads to reduced foraging efficiency by living in the bee’s alveoli. Certain protozoans and fungi consume the host tissue or gut substances of the bumble bee’s digestive tract, decreasing foraging efficiency, life span, and thus the colony fitness. Bees may contain symbiotic bacteria that offer some immunity to pathogens. Further exposure to habitat loss as well as pesticide exposure may lead to bee predisposition, thus promoting the species’ decay.


Mimicry

Since bumble bees are characterized by a striking color pattern as well as a defensive sting, they are involved in mimetic complexes (both
Müllerian mimicry Müllerian mimicry is a natural phenomenon in which two or more well-defended species, often foul-tasting and sharing common predators, have come to mimic each other's honest warning signals, to their mutual benefit. The benefit to Müllerian ...
and
Batesian mimicry Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a predator of them both. It is named after the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates, after his work on bu ...
) with other insects that also gain reduced predation. ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' is mimicked by various sawflies, day-flying moths (e.g. ''
Hemaris diffinis ''Hemaris diffinis'', the snowberry clearwing, is a moth of the order Lepidoptera, family Sphingidae. This moth is sometimes called "hummingbird moth" or "flying lobster". This moth should not be confused with the hummingbird hawk-moth of Eur ...
''), beetles, flies, and other bees, such as carpenter and digger bees.


Behavior


Pollinator preference

Wesselingh and Arnold (2000) studied pollinator preferences on ''
Iris fulva ''Iris fulva'', also known as copper iris, is a species in the genus '' Iris'', it is also in the subgenus '' Limniris'' and in the series '' Hexagonae''. It is a rhizomatous perennial, endemic to the southern and central United States. It has co ...
'' (red-flowered) and ''
Iris brevicaulis ''Iris brevicaulis'' is a species in the genus ''Iris (plant), Iris'', it is also in the subgenus ''Iris subg. Limniris, Limniris'' and in the series ''Louisiana iris, Hexagonae''. It is a rhizomatous perennial plant, perennial, from North Ameri ...
'' (blue-flowered). ''B. pensylvanicus'' preferred purple-flowered hybrids. The bees continued to visit the nearest flowers the majority of the time, demonstrating that movements were usually between a diversity of flower types rather than prioritizing only one type of flower. Thus, a lack of intermediate
genotype The genotype of an organism is its complete set of genetic material. Genotype can also be used to refer to the alleles or variants an individual carries in a particular gene or genetic location. The number of alleles an individual can have in a ...
s of iris hybrids is not due to pollinator preference by ''B. pensylvanicus'', but rather, pollinating behavior is done through mixed mating of alternating flower types of different pollination syndromes.


Resource partitioning

Johnson tested for intraspecific size resource utilization differences in ''B. pensylvanicus''. In Minnesota, flowers with short corollas and long corollas existed in single and mixed species stands. Foragers with short corollas and shorter proboscises (tongue) were discovered in mixed species stands. Johnson concluded that ''B. pensylvanicus'' foragers would preference the corolla length that corresponds with their proboscis length. Further comparison of conspecific foragers of mixed versus single species stands revealed a shorter proboscis length for mixed species in comparison to single species stand for the short corolla. This study postulated that a diversity of flowering species may influence the specific bee that pollinates the species for single species stand.


Gene flow and decline

Bumblebee species have been found to deteriorate substantially in 1940-1960, and continue to decrease presently. Ranges of ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' have specifically decreased in Illinois, coinciding with agricultural investment within the state. Lozier and Cameron evaluated genetic structure using
microsatellite A microsatellite is a tract of repetitive DNA in which certain DNA motifs (ranging in length from one to six or more base pairs) are repeated, typically 5–50 times. Microsatellites occur at thousands of locations within an organism's genome. ...
markers in Illinois to compare genetic variation of historical versus contemporary collections within ''B. pensylvanicus''. It was found that ''B. pensylvanicus'' had greater population structure, indicating reduced gene flow and dispersal among populations. It was found that genetic diversity has overall not been significantly altered over time, but there were some reductions in ''B. pensylvanicus''. Slight losses of genetic diversity in ''B. pensylvanicus'' may be an indication of the species’ decline. These results were expected because of the recent decrease in population, which would cause declines in genetic diversity for severe bottleneck situations. Thus, the alteration in gene flow may suggest potential future genetic differentiation of the ''B. pensylvanicus''.


Status

Current research states that ''Bombus pensylvanicus'' is uncommon and declining quickly. As stated in previous sections, the northern range of ''B. pensylvanicus'' has significantly decreased. Once the most abundant species throughout the southern United States, ''B. pensylvanicus'' is now a rare species that has been extirpated in certain areas and has suffered declines in others. Conservation efforts are encouraged in order to maintain the species including agriculture with wildlife-friendly techniques including hedgerows and pest management.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q726901 Bumblebees Hymenoptera of North America Insects described in 1773 Taxa named by Charles De Geer