We may have all found ourselves in that situation in which we see an insect on a flower and we wonder whether it is a wasp or a bee, and we may have also seen people panic when they encounter a bee, thinking that it is indeed a wasp. Although the two groups are very distinct and there are several ways of telling them apart (check out this previous post to see how to do it), this difficulty is in part a signature of the shared evolutionary history that the two groups have. In today’s post, I want to tell you about the evolutionary origin of bees, how it is interwoven with that of wasps, and how evolutionary studies can help us understand and explain the diversity of our charismatic bees.
Evolutionary histories and the big family we are all part of
Before jumping into the main topic of this blog, please bear with me so I can give you a bit of context for what I’ll tell you, and so you can fully appreciate the power of the discoveries I will tell you about in just a second. One of the foundations of today’s biology and the way we understand life is that living organisms share a common ancestry and that evolutionary processes such as natural selection, mutations, dispersal, and random processes have led to the establishment of new lineages that can evolve into new species and new groups of organisms. What this means is that all the living organisms we know can be placed in a sort of genealogical tree, where more closely related species and groups appear placed on branches of the trees that are also closer to each other (we call these trees “phylogenies” or “phylogenetic trees”). Also, this means that if we were to take these trees, and we were to follow the evolutionary process “backward” (from the tips to the internal branches; that is, from the present into the past), we would be able to identify branching points, which represent the now extinct ancestors of species we know today.
Although this may sound like a biological nerd moment of mine, I hope that you will appreciate the enormity of this principle. This simple concept indicates that each of us and all species that exist on the planet have shared ancestors at some point in our history. We are all related to each other, like a huge family… and as for all families, the study of our history can teach us fun and interesting things about who we are, helping us understand and explain things we observe today. Let me tell you what the study of these phylogenies has taught us about wasps and bees (and their shared history) and why this excuses us in part from not always being able to tell them apart 😉.
Bees and wasps, and the vegetarian wasp
As you may know, bees and wasps are both insects that belong to the order Hymenoptera. Despite the fact that people knew they were related but distinct from each other, it was not until relatively recently that people understood what that relationship was. In fact, because they share a lot of common traits, scientists were for a long time confused about what the most closely related group of Hymenoptera was for bees, wasps, and ants. Some years ago, with the development of new methods that allow for more detailed studies of phylogenies, researchers found strong evidence that ants are a group of organisms that is related but distinct from another group formed by bees and by a particular group of solitary and usually ground-nesting wasps called crabronids. Besides the taxonomic and purely conceptual importance of this discovery, what this meant biologically was on the one hand, that bees are evolutionarily extremely closely related to wasps, to the point that we could consider them “non-carnivorous wasps”. On the other hand, this discovery showed that all bees we know today would have evolved from a wasp-like ancestor that was solitary and ground-nesting, like the crabronids we know today.
If you’re like me and find this fun, keep reading because it gets even more fun! 😊 So, after this discovery, the people who work on these topics wanted to know more. For example, can phylogenies tell us more about how the transition from a meat-based diet (wasps are carnivores) to a pollen-based one (bees feed mostly on pollen and nectar) could have happened? To investigate this, researchers ran a similar analysis, but this time considering a lot more species of both bees and crabronids. Constructing phylogenies using genetic information, they figured that when the evolutionary relationships of these groups were studied, it appeared that bees were the most closely related to a particular group of crabronids that is known to predate on thrips (a family called Ammoplanidae).
Besides confirming the discoveries of the previous study, this one provided a logical and interesting biological and ecological context for the transition from carnivory to pollinivory in bees. Thrips are a group of insects known to feed on plant materials, often found on flowers, where they feed on pollen. This new study proposed that a possible evolutionary opportunity may have appeared when a lineage of thrip-predating wasps evolved the ability to not only digest thrips meat but also the pollen they contained in their guts (!!). This transition could have set the evolutionary foundations to eventually transition to a diet fully based on pollen, which opened opportunities to the newly emerging lineage to feed on a new dietary resource not already in use by other wasps. If this is true, this transition would have provided an important evolutionary advantage (e.g., reduced competition for food), which would have led to the huge diversification of bees, leading to the extreme diversity we see today.
By Anahí Espíndola, Assistant Professor, Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park. See more posts by Anahí.
Anahí also writes an Extension Blog in Spanish! Check it out here, extensionesp.umd.edu, and please share and spread the word to your Spanish-speaking friends and colleagues in Maryland. ¡Bienvenidos a Extensión en Español!