- Mon Oct 08, 2018 7:57 pm
#59326
Here is my explanation for this question. Is this correct?
> I noticed the stim doesn't mention the ratio of species/square footage that they visit. So I interpreted the last sentence as meaning: maybe both bees visit 5 species per 1 square meter, so their ratio of species:range is equivalent, but it's just that honeybees visit 2 square meters whereas bumblebees visit only one. I assumed that the time it took for them to cover this # of species and range is irrelevant.
A) This says that if a honeybee visits a wider variety of plant species compared to bumblebees (which we know they do, as directly stated), the honeybee will be less efficient than the bumblebee at pollinating ANY ONE of those species. Not true. We only know this is the case for cranberries, but we don't know which plants the honeybee may be more efficient at pollinating with within their "range".
B) This is lightly supported and most safe. The number of plant species visited by the bee (we know honeybees visit an absolute # more) has some effect on the efficiency with which to pollinate cranberries. Maybe cranberries are a special kind of species that require the bee to not have any trace of other species' pollen on the bees' bodies in order for them to be pollinated. Maybe their pollen must be more "pure" in order to be efficient, so bumblebees are suited for the task.
C) This is completely contradicted by the argument: says the broader the area, the fewer the species, but we know that the opposite is actually true.
D) We don't know anything about the concentration of cranberries/or the concentration of species in general. We only know information about the bees themselves and their species/distribution range. We can't say anything about the likelihood of bumblebees vs honeybees visiting cranberries.
E) We don't know that maybe honeybees actually have an extremely high likelihood of visiting cranberries (ties in with (D)); maybe cranberries are distributed over a wide range and take up 90% of a forest. So the honeybee may technically visit all the 11 species in a forest, 10 of which comprise only a 1% chance of being visited, but the chance of visiting cranberries is still much much higher. Whereas for bumblebees, maybe they only visit a bush (as opposed to a forest) that has 2 species within it, cranberries and blueberries. In that tiny bush, there is a 1% chance of encountering cranberries and 99% of encountering blueberries.