| Literature DB >> 34955328 |
M A Parreño1, C Alaux2, J-L Brunet2, L Buydens3, M Filipiak4, M Henry2, A Keller5, A-M Klein6, M Kuhlmann7, C Leroy2, I Meeus3, E Palmer-Young8, N Piot3, F Requier9, F Ruedenauer10, G Smagghe3, P C Stevenson11, S D Leonhardt12.
Abstract
Wild bee populations are declining due to human activities, such as land use change, which strongly affect the composition and diversity of available plants and food sources. The chemical composition of food (i.e., nutrition) in turn determines the health, resilience, and fitness of bees. For pollinators, however, the term 'health' is recent and is subject to debate, as is the interaction between nutrition and wild bee health. We define bee health as a multidimensional concept in a novel integrative framework linking bee biological traits (physiology, stoichiometry, and disease) and environmental factors (floral diversity and nutritional landscapes). Linking information on tolerated nutritional niches and health in different bee species will allow us to better predict their distribution and responses to environmental change, and thus support wild pollinator conservation.Entities:
Keywords: Hymenoptera; biodiversity loss; conservation; ecosystem services; physiology; plant–insect interactions; pollination; pollinators
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34955328 DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2021.11.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Ecol Evol ISSN: 0169-5347 Impact factor: 17.712