For the first time ever, scientists have documented a widespread extinction of bees concurrent with the massive event that wiped out land dinosaurs and many flowering plants.
Lead author Sandra Rehan, an assistant professor of biological sciences at University of New Hampshire (UNH), and colleagues modelled a mass extinction in bee group Xylocopinae, or carpenter bees, at the end of the Cretaceous and beginning of the Paleogene eras, known as the K-T boundary.
Previous studies have suggested a widespread extinction among flowering plants at the K-T boundary, and it's long been assumed that the bees who depended upon those plants would have met the same fate.
Rehan and colleagues overcame the lack of fossil evidence for bees with a technique called molecular phylogenetics.
More From This Section
Analysing DNA sequences of four "tribes" of 230 species of carpenter bees from every continent except Antarctica for insight into evolutionary relationships, the researchers began to see patterns consistent with a mass extinction.
Combining fossil records with the DNA analysis, the researchers could introduce time into the equation, learning not only how the bees are related but also how old they are.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.