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How does pollen chemistry impact development and feeding behaviour of polylectic bees

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TLDR
Results show that pollen collection is similar regardless of chemical variation in pollen diet while syrup collection is variable, and pollen nutritional “theme” seems to promote worker reproduction in B. terrestris micro-colonies and could be linked to high fitness for queenright colonies.
Abstract
Larvae and imagos of bees rely exclusively on floral rewards as a food source but host-plant range can vary greatly among bee species. While oligolectic species forage on pollen from a single family of host plants, polylectic bees, such as bumblebees, collect pollen from many families of plants. These polylectic species contend with interspecific variability in essential nutrients of their host-plants but we have only a limited understanding of the way in which chemicals and chemical combinations influence bee development and feeding behaviour. In this paper, we investigated five different pollen diets (Calluna vulgaris, Cistus sp., Cytisus scoparius, Salix caprea and Sorbus aucuparia) to determine how their chemical content affected bumblebee colony development and pollen/syrup collection. Three compounds were used to characterise pollen content: polypeptides, amino acids and sterols. Several parameters were used to determine the impact of diet on micro-colonies: (i) Number and weight of larvae (total and mean weight of larvae), (ii) weight of pollen collected, (iii) pollen efficacy (total weight of larvae divided by weight of the pollen collected) and (iv) syrup collection. Our results show that pollen collection is similar regardless of chemical variation in pollen diet while syrup collection is variable. Micro-colonies fed on S. aucuparia and C. scoparius pollen produced larger larvae (i.e. better mates and winter survivors) and fed less on nectar compared to the other diets. Pollen from both of these species contains 24-methylenecholesterol and high concentrations of polypeptides/total amino acids. This pollen nutritional “theme” seems therefore to promote worker reproduction in B. terrestris micro-colonies and could be linked to high fitness for queenright colonies. As workers are able to selectively forage on pollen of high chemical quality, plants may be evolutionarily selected for their pollen content, which might attract and increase the degree of fidelity of generalist pollinators, such as bumblebees.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Bee nutrition and floral resource restoration

TL;DR: Restoring appropriate suites of plant species to landscapes can support diverse bee species populations and their associated pollination ecosystem services and develop diverse and nutritionally balanced plant communities.
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Honey Bee Nutrition

Journal ArticleDOI

Macronutrient ratios in pollen shape bumble bee (Bombus impatiens) foraging strategies and floral preferences

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that bumble bees selectively collect pollen from host-plant species based on the protein:lipid ratios of pollen, and macronutritional ratios appear to be a primary factor driving bee pollen-foraging behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutritional Physiology and Ecology of Honey Bees

TL;DR: Research clearly shows that bees regulate their intake, like other animals, around specific proportions of macronutrients, done as individuals and at the colony level by foragers.
References
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Journal Article

R: A language and environment for statistical computing.

R Core Team
- 01 Jan 2014 - 
TL;DR: Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing; permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved on all copies.
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The ecodist Package for Dissimilarity-based Analysis of Ecological Data

TL;DR: A modification of the Mantel correlogram is introduced designed to overcome this restriction and allow consideration of complex nonlinear structures and the use of partial multivariate correlograms and tests of relationship between variables at different spatial scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pollination Syndromes and Floral Specialization

TL;DR: It is shown that pollination syndromes provide great utility in understanding the mechanisms of floral diversification and the importance of organizing pollinators into functional groups according to presumed similarities in the selection pressures they exert.
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