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The evolutionary history of bees in time and space

Eduardo A. B. Almeida, Silas Bossert, Bryan N. Danforth, Diego S. Porto, Felipe V. Freitas, Charles C. Davis, Elizabeth A. Murray, Bonnie B. Blaimer, Tamara Spasojevic, Patricia R. Stroeher, Michael C. Orr, Laurence Packer, Sean G. Brady, Michael Kuhlmann, Michael G. Branstetter, Marcio R. Pie

Current biology : CB(2023)

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Abstract
Bees are the most significant pollinators of flowering plants. This partnership began ca. 120 million years ago, but the uncertainty of how and when bees spread across the planet has greatly obscured investigations of this key mutualism. We present a novel analysis of bee biogeography using extensive new genomic and fossil data to demonstrate that bees originated in Western Gondwana (Africa and South America). Bees likely orig-inated in the Early Cretaceous, shortly before the breakup of Western Gondwana, and the early evolution of any major bee lineage is associated with either the South American or African land masses. Subsequently, bees colonized northern continents via a complex history of vicariance and dispersal. The notable early ab-sences from large landmasses, particularly in Australia and India, have important implications for under-standing the assembly of local floras and diverse modes of pollination. How bees spread around the world from their hypothesized Southern Hemisphere origin parallels the histories of numerous flowering plant clades, providing an essential step to studying the evolution of angiosperm pollination syndromes in space and time.
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