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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America logoLink to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
. 1988 Sep;85(17):6424–6426. doi: 10.1073/pnas.85.17.6424

The oldest fossil bee: Apoid history, evolutionary stasis, and antiquity of social behavior

Charles D Michener *, David A Grimaldi
PMCID: PMC281984  PMID: 16593976

Abstract

Trigona prisca, a stingless honey bee (Apidae; Meliponinae), is reported from Cretaceous New Jersey amber (96-74 million years before present). This is about twice the age of the oldest previously known fossil bee, although Trigona is one of the most derived bee genera. T. prisca is closely similar to modern neotropical species. Most of bee evolution probably occurred during the ≈50 million years between the beginning of the Cretaceous when flowering plants (on which bees depend) appeared and the time of T. prisca. Since then, in this phyletic line of Meliponinae, there has been almost no morphological evolution. Since the fossil is a worker, social organization had arisen by its time.

Keywords: Meliponinae, stingless bees, Apidae, Cretaceous pollinators, amber

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Selected References

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