Vanderplanck Maryse, Zerck Pierre-Laurent, Lognay Georges, Michez Denis
Laboratory of Zoology Research Institute for Biosciences University of Mons Mons Belgium.
Evo-Eco-Paleo - UMR 8198 CNRS University of Lille Lille France.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Dec 14;10(1):150-162. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5868. eCollection 2020 Jan.
Host-plant selection is a key factor driving the ecology and evolution of insects. While the majority of phytophagous insects is highly host specific, generalist behavior is quite widespread among bees and presumably involves physiological adaptations that remain largely unexplored. However, floral visitation patterns suggest that generalist bees do not forage randomly on all available resources. While resource availability and accessibility as well as nectar composition have been widely explored, pollen chemistry could also have an impact on the range of suitable host-plants. This study focuses on particular pollen nutrients that cannot be synthesized de novo by insects but are key compounds of cell membranes and the precursor for molting process: the sterols. We compared the sterol composition of pollen from the main host-plants of three generalist bees: , , and , as well as one specialist bee . We also analyzed the sterols of their brood cell provisions, the tissues of larvae and nonemerged females to determine which sterols are used by the different species. Our results show that sterols are not used accordingly to foraging strategy: Both the specialist species and the generalist species might metabolize a rare C sterol, while the two generalist species and might rather use a very common C sterol. Our results suggest that shared sterolic compounds among plant species could facilitate the exploitation of multiple host-plants by and whereas the generalist might be more constrained due to its physiological requirements of a more uncommon dietary sterol. Our findings suggest that a bee displaying a generalist foraging behavior may sometimes hide a sterol-specialized species. This evidence challenges the hypothesis that all generalist free-living bee species are all able to develop on a wide range of different pollen types.
寄主植物的选择是驱动昆虫生态与进化的关键因素。虽然大多数植食性昆虫具有高度的寄主专一性,但多食性行为在蜜蜂中相当普遍,并且可能涉及到很大程度上尚未被探索的生理适应性。然而,访花模式表明多食性蜜蜂并非在所有可利用资源上随机觅食。虽然资源的可用性、可获取性以及花蜜成分已得到广泛研究,但花粉化学成分也可能对适宜寄主植物的范围产生影响。本研究聚焦于特定的花粉营养物质,这些营养物质无法由昆虫从头合成,却是细胞膜的关键成分以及蜕皮过程的前体:甾醇。我们比较了三种多食性蜜蜂(分别为[具体物种1]、[具体物种2]和[具体物种3])以及一种专食性蜜蜂([具体物种4])主要寄主植物的花粉甾醇组成。我们还分析了它们育儿细胞储备、幼虫组织和未羽化雌虫组织中的甾醇,以确定不同物种使用哪些甾醇。我们的结果表明,甾醇的使用与觅食策略并不一致:专食性物种[具体物种4]和多食性物种[具体物种1]可能都会代谢一种罕见的C甾醇,而两种多食性物种[具体物种2]和[具体物种3]可能更倾向于使用一种非常常见的C甾醇。我们的结果表明,植物物种间共享的甾醇化合物可能有助于[具体物种2]和[具体物种3]对多种寄主植物的利用,而多食性物种[具体物种1]可能因其对一种更不常见的膳食甾醇的生理需求而受到更多限制。我们的研究结果表明,表现出多食性觅食行为的蜜蜂有时可能隐藏着一个甾醇特化物种。这一证据挑战了所有自由生活的多食性蜜蜂物种都能够在广泛的不同花粉类型上发育的假设。