Abstract Interactions between oil‐collecting bees and oil‐producing flowers are a very specialized mutualism, whose natural history is well known at the organism and population levels. In this study, we assessed these interactions at the biome level with a network approach, and hypothesized that widespread bee and plant species would occupy different ecological functional roles ( E ltonian niches) in different biomes. Furthermore, we expected the most important functional roles in each network to be occupied more frequently by B yrsonima oil flowers and Centris oil bees, which share the longest coevolutionary history in the N eotropics. By compiling data from 40 articles on oil flower interactions within the M alpighiaceae family, we built six networks for different B razilian biomes. We assessed the ecological functional role of each species in pollination networks of oil flowers through the metric known as ‘network functional role’. Although 90 percent of the species occupied peripheral roles in each network, some were found to occupy highly central roles. Oil flowers of the genera B yrsonima and B anisteriopsis and oil bees of the genera C entris and E picharis were the most important species in all networks, as they made a disproportionally high number of interactions (hubs), or helped bind together different modules (connectors). Our findings suggest that functional roles vary geographically and seem to be affected by local conditions in different biomes. Furthermore, coevolutionary history seems to play an important role in determining functional roles in oil flower networks, although other factors are probably also important, especially the degree of specialization in this kind of interaction.