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Team solves puzzle of when bees first evolved

Bees first evolved more than 120 million years ago and diversified faster and spread wider than previously thought.
A bee hovers next to a yellow flower.

Bees first evolved on an ancient supercontinent more than 120 million years ago, diversifying faster and spreading wider than previously suspected, a new study shows.

The study, published in Current Biology, also reconstructs the evolutionary history of bees, estimates their antiquity, and identifies their likely geographical expansion around the world.

The results indicate their point of origin was in western Gondwana, an ancient supercontinent that at that time included today’s continents of Africa and South America.

“There’s been a longstanding puzzle about the spatial origin of bees,” says Silas Bossert, assistant professor in the entomology department at Washington State University, who co-led the project with Eduardo Almeida, associate professor at the University of São Paulo, Brazil.

The researchers sequenced and compared genes from more than 200 bee species. They compared them with traits from 185 different bee fossils, as well as extinct species, developing an evolutionary history and genealogical models for historical bee distribution.

In what may be the broadest genomic study of bees to date, they analyzed hundreds to thousands of genes at a time to make sure that the relationships they inferred were correct.

“This is the first time we have broad genome-scale data for all seven bee families,” says coauthor Elizabeth Murray, an assistant professor of entomology at Washington State.

Previous research established that the first bees likely evolved from wasps, transitioning from predators to collectors of nectar and pollen. This study shows they arose in arid regions of western Gondwana during the early Cretaceous period.

“For the first time, we have statistical evidence that bees originated on Gondwana,” Bossert says. “We now know that bees are originally southern hemisphere insects.”

The researchers found evidence that as the new continents formed, bees moved north, diversifying and spreading in a parallel partnership with angiosperms, the flowering plants. Later, they colonized India and Australia. All major families of bees appeared to split off prior to the dawn of the Tertiary period, 65 million years ago—the era when dinosaurs became extinct.

The tropical regions of the western hemisphere have an exceptionally rich flora, and that diversity may be due to their longtime association with bees, the authors note. One quarter of all flowering plants belong to the large and diverse rose family, which make up a significant share of the tropical and temperate host plants for bees.

Bossert’s team plans to continue their efforts, sequencing and studying the genetics and history of more species of bees. Their findings are a useful step in revealing how bees and flowering plants evolved together. Understanding how bees spread and filled their modern ecological niches could also help keep pollinator populations healthy.

“People are paying more attention to the conservation of bees and are trying to keep these species alive where they are,” Murray says. “This work opens the way for more studies on the historical and ecological stage.”

Additional coauthors are from Harvard University; Cornell University; the Smithsonian Institution; the Federal University of Paraná, Brazil; the State Museum of Natural History, Stuttgart; York University; the University of Kiel; the US Department of Agriculture; and Washington State.

Source: Washington State University

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