| Literature DB >> 27731933 |
Maryse Vanderplanck1, Sylvain Decleves1, Nathalie Roger1, Corentin Decroo2, Guillaume Caulier3, Gaetan Glauser4, Pascal Gerbaux2, Georges Lognay5, Aurore Richel6, Nathalie Escaravage7, Denis Michez1.
Abstract
Current evidence suggests that pollen is both chemically and structurally protected. Despite increasing interest in studying bee-flower networks, the constraints for bee development related to pollen nutritional content, toxicity and digestibility as well as their role in the shaping of bee-flower interactions have been poorly studied. In this study we combined bioassays of the generalist bee Bombus terrestris on pollen of Cirsium, Trifolium, Salix, and Cistus genera with an assessment of nutritional content, toxicity, and digestibility of pollen. Microcolonies showed significant differences in their development, non-host pollen of Cirsium being the most unfavorable. This pollen was characterized by the presence of quite rare δ7-sterols and a low digestibility. Cirsium consumption seemed increase syrup collection, which is probably related to a detoxification mixing behavior. These results strongly suggest that pollen traits may act as drivers of plant selection by bees and partly explain why Asteraceae pollen is rare in bee generalist diet.Entities:
Keywords: bee-flower interactions; generalist bees; pollen defences
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27731933 DOI: 10.1111/1744-7917.12410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insect Sci ISSN: 1672-9609 Impact factor: 3.262