Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera

Natural cavities in polyculture plantations are important for the conservation of honeybees. This study was aimed to determine the diversity, nest sizes, and fluctuations in the use of sites for nesting by Apis cerana Fabr. in polyculture plantations in two altitudes in West Sumatra. A census method...

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Main Authors: JASMI, SITI SALMAH, DAHELMI, SYAMSUARDI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bogor Agricultural University 2014-09-01
Series:Hayati Journal of Biosciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S197830191630064X
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spelling doaj-c25ffd75123d47ffb2f7f5d5b26990112020-11-24T23:46:19ZengBogor Agricultural UniversityHayati Journal of Biosciences1978-30192014-09-0121313514310.4308/hjb.21.3.135Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West SumateraJASMI0SITI SALMAH1DAHELMI2SYAMSUARDI3Department of Biology Education, STKIP PGRI West Sumatra, Gunung Pangilun Street, Padang 25137, IndonesiaDepartment of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science, Andalas University, Limau Manis, Padang 25163, IndonesiaDepartment of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science, Andalas University, Limau Manis, Padang 25163, IndonesiaDepartment of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science, Andalas University, Limau Manis, Padang 25163, IndonesiaNatural cavities in polyculture plantations are important for the conservation of honeybees. This study was aimed to determine the diversity, nest sizes, and fluctuations in the use of sites for nesting by Apis cerana Fabr. in polyculture plantations in two altitudes in West Sumatra. A census method was used to obtain the data variables in 10 plantations (five locations for each altitute). Polyculture plantations used as the study sites were dominated by coconut in lowland areas and coffee in highland areas. The results showed that nesting sites of Apis cerana were found amongst 18 species of plants belonging to 15 families (12 species in lowlands and seven species in highlands). Most of the nests were placed on Cocos nucifera (coconut) trees in lowland sites, and on Erythria variegata (dadap) in highland sites. Nests were also found to be located mostly in the cavities of trees with diameter 21-60 cm. Nest entrances were located at 228.31 cm above ground surface (ags) in highland and at 116.04 cm ags in lowlands. The nest entrances in highlands measured 12.21 by 3.73 cm (height and width), and in the lowlands 14.93 by 7.36 cm. The percentage of tree cavities used for nesting was statically higher in lowland (40.73%) compared to high land (17.86%), but it fluctuated very slightly in both high or lowland areas during observation. The percentage of trees with nests decreased in December and January but increased in February, with the same patterns found in both high and lowlands. Our research suggests that higher tree diversity in polyculture plantations promotes increased use by honeybees for nesting. Thus, the more tree diversity in polyculture plantations the better it could conserve natural honey bees populations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S197830191630064Xhoneybeenesting diversityaltitudecolony fluctuation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author JASMI
SITI SALMAH
DAHELMI
SYAMSUARDI
spellingShingle JASMI
SITI SALMAH
DAHELMI
SYAMSUARDI
Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
Hayati Journal of Biosciences
honeybee
nesting diversity
altitude
colony fluctuation
author_facet JASMI
SITI SALMAH
DAHELMI
SYAMSUARDI
author_sort JASMI
title Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
title_short Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
title_full Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
title_fullStr Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
title_full_unstemmed Nesting Sites of Apis cerana Fabr. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Two Different Altitutes of Polyculture Plantations in West Sumatera
title_sort nesting sites of apis cerana fabr. (hymenoptera: apidae) in two different altitutes of polyculture plantations in west sumatera
publisher Bogor Agricultural University
series Hayati Journal of Biosciences
issn 1978-3019
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Natural cavities in polyculture plantations are important for the conservation of honeybees. This study was aimed to determine the diversity, nest sizes, and fluctuations in the use of sites for nesting by Apis cerana Fabr. in polyculture plantations in two altitudes in West Sumatra. A census method was used to obtain the data variables in 10 plantations (five locations for each altitute). Polyculture plantations used as the study sites were dominated by coconut in lowland areas and coffee in highland areas. The results showed that nesting sites of Apis cerana were found amongst 18 species of plants belonging to 15 families (12 species in lowlands and seven species in highlands). Most of the nests were placed on Cocos nucifera (coconut) trees in lowland sites, and on Erythria variegata (dadap) in highland sites. Nests were also found to be located mostly in the cavities of trees with diameter 21-60 cm. Nest entrances were located at 228.31 cm above ground surface (ags) in highland and at 116.04 cm ags in lowlands. The nest entrances in highlands measured 12.21 by 3.73 cm (height and width), and in the lowlands 14.93 by 7.36 cm. The percentage of tree cavities used for nesting was statically higher in lowland (40.73%) compared to high land (17.86%), but it fluctuated very slightly in both high or lowland areas during observation. The percentage of trees with nests decreased in December and January but increased in February, with the same patterns found in both high and lowlands. Our research suggests that higher tree diversity in polyculture plantations promotes increased use by honeybees for nesting. Thus, the more tree diversity in polyculture plantations the better it could conserve natural honey bees populations.
topic honeybee
nesting diversity
altitude
colony fluctuation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S197830191630064X
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