Abstract:
A Bombus pullatus nest 5.5 m above the ground in the foliage of a banana plant
was collected at 1,400 m elevation near San Vito de Java, Costa Rica. Containing
36 presumably virgin queens, 259 workers, and 48 males, the colony has certain
traits suggesting perenniality or mobility. It is postulated that the failure of
bumble-bees to attain an abundance in the wet lowland tropics equivalent to that
in temperate mesic habitats may be due to a shortage in tropical habitats of dry
underground cavities plus the ephemeral nature of arboreal nest sites, increased
predation on both individual bees and entire nests, and increased competition for
arboreal nest sites by smaller social bees and ants.