Research Institute of Biosciences, Laboratory of Zoology, University of Mons, Mons, Belgium.
Research Institute of Biosciences, Laboratory of Zoology, University of Mons, Mons, Belgium ; Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 21;9(1):e86209. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0086209. eCollection 2014.
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.
蜜蜂的幼虫和成虫完全依赖花的蜜露作为食物来源,但不同种蜜蜂的寄主植物范围差异很大。寡食性物种仅从单一科的寄主植物中采集花粉,而多食性物种,如熊蜂,则从许多科的植物中采集花粉。这些多食性物种面临着寄主植物必需营养物质的种间变异性,但我们对化学物质及其组合如何影响蜜蜂发育和取食行为的了解还很有限。在本文中,我们研究了五种不同的花粉饲料(普通柳穿鱼、滨藜、香石竹、欧洲山柳菊和欧洲花楸),以确定它们的化学物质含量如何影响熊蜂的种群发展和花粉/糖浆的采集。我们使用三种化合物来描述花粉的含量:多肽、氨基酸和固醇。我们使用了几个参数来确定饮食对微型种群的影响:(i)幼虫的数量和重量(幼虫总数和平均体重)、(ii)收集的花粉量、(iii)花粉效率(幼虫总重量除以收集的花粉量)和(iv)糖浆收集量。我们的结果表明,无论花粉饮食中的化学变化如何,花粉的采集量相似,而糖浆的采集量则不同。以 S. aucuparia 和 C. scoparius 花粉为食的微型种群产生的幼虫较大(即更好的配偶和冬季幸存者),与其他饮食相比,对花蜜的摄入量较少。这两个物种的花粉都含有 24-亚甲基胆固醇和高浓度的多肽/总氨基酸。因此,这种花粉的营养“主题”似乎促进了 B. terrestris 微型种群中工蜂的繁殖,并且可能与蜂王群体的高适合度有关。由于工蜂能够有选择性地采集高化学质量的花粉,植物可能会因其花粉含量而被进化选择,这可能会吸引并增加一般传粉者(如熊蜂)的忠诚度。