Pollen‐feeding in hover‐flies (Diptera: Syrphidae)

Abstract
Analyses of the pollen contents of the crop and intestine of 11 species of New Zealand Syrphidae . showed that small, sparsely haired hover‐flies with unbranched hairs, short, simple bristles, and a short proboscis had ingested at least 99% anemophilous pollens, and that larger, more hairy hover‐flies with pollen‐collecting hairs, long, spirally grooved bristles, and elongate mouthparts had ingested pollens almost exclusively from nectar‐bearing flowers. Pollen‐feeding behaviour was studied in one hairy species, the drone‐fly Eristalis tenax, and in one sparsely‐haired species, Melanostoma fasciatum. Using granulated charcoal as a substitute for pollen, it was found that in E. tenax particles trapped among the body hairs are combed off by the front and hind tibiae and transferred to pollen‐retaining bristles on the front and hind tarsi respectively. Particles retained among the front tarsal bristles are ingested directly from the bristles. Those retained by the hind tarsi are transferred in flight by leg‐scraping movements to the front tarsi, from which they are subsequently eaten. E. tenax also eats pollen directly from anthers. In M. fasciatum apparently all the pollen ingested is taken directly from anther lobes or stigmas. The few pollen grains that adhere to the body of this species are combed off by the front and hind tibiae and transferred to the front and hind tarsi, but are not retained there because the bristles are short and simple. The mouthparts, hairs, and bristles of E. tenax and M. fasciatum are illustrated. Drawings of leg movements associated with pollen collection and ingestion, and photographs showing leg scraping in E. tenax are included. Morphological similarities between drone‐flies and honey‐bees, previously regarded as the result of mimicry, can be explained by convergent evolution in response to similar food‐gathering behaviour. Probably the majority of Syrphidae, and also the related Acroceridae, collect pollen by means of branched or curly‐tipped hairs.