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Allodapini

The Allodapini is a tribe of bees in the subfamily Xylocopinae, family Apidae. They occur throughout sub-Saharan Africa, South East Asia, and Australasia. There is also a rare genus, Exoneuridia, that occurs in isolated regions of Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon and Iran.

Social evolution
Many allodapine species exhibit very simple forms of social organization, without clear queen or worker castes. For this reason it was long thought that they had only recently evolved forms of social living. However, molecular phylogenetic studies show that social living is ancestral for the tribe as a whole and has been in place for about 50 million years. and complex forms of kin recognition. The origin of queen and workers castes in allodapine bees is relatively recent, much less than 40 million years ago, compared with the honeybees, bumble bees and stingless bees, where true queen and worker castes evolved about 100 million years ago. ==Sex allocation==
Sex allocation
Most allodapine bee species have strongly female-biased sex ratios, and in many species less than 15% of brood are male. For example, in Exoneura robusta, females provide the useful work in the colony and group living increases colony success, so the sex ratio is almost always female biased in this species. ==Social parasitism==
Social parasitism
Socially parasitic allodapine bees are species that have evolved to exploit the social systems of their hosts (which are other allodapine bees) so that the parasites enter the host colonies and lay their eggs there, and both the parasite adults as well as their larvae are fed by the host species. Molecular research has revealed nine origins of social parasitism in allodapine bees, more than all other bees and wasp groups combined. These repeated origins of social parasitism are probably due to the allodapine trait of rearing brood in communal tunnels, a trait that might allow other species to surreptitiously lay additional eggs without them being detected. ==Historical biogeography==
Historical biogeography
Several studies have shown that allodapine bees first evolved in Africa and then spread to Madagascar, Asia and Australia. The earliest dispersal from Africa to Australia occurred about 30 million years ago and did not appear to involve a route via Asia, leading to a biogeographical puzzle because of the expanse of the Indian Ocean separating Australia from Africa. The most likely routes involved were now-submerged island stepping stones across the Indian Ocean, or dispersal from Africa to Antarctica and then overland dispersal from Antarctica to Australia when the two continents were still connected (ref). Both of these scenarios are problematic, but have been suggested for other animal and plant species. ==Conservation issues and biodiversity==
Conservation issues and biodiversity
Recent studies are marked by the number of species they have involved that have not been formally described (refs). This suggests that there is a large amount of allodapine diversity that is not covered by formal scientific taxonomy. Conservation concerns centre on two regions: (i) large-scale habitat loss in Madagascar poses a major threat to that island's unique bee fauna, including allodapine bees, many of which are still to be scientifically described; and (ii) the Australian region is likely to contain many undescribed socially parasitic species which are threatened because of their very small populations sizes. Conservation threats to allodapine bees in Asia have not been studied. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:Allodapula sp, volwassene, Pretoria, b.jpg| File:Braunsapis plumosa.jpg| File:Exoneura bicincta.jpg| File:Exoneurella setosa f.jpg| File:Exoneuridia libanensis female 1.jpg| File:Halterapis rufa Female.jpg| File:Macrogalea sp Male.jpg| ==References==
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