Do past and present abiotic conditions explain variation in the nutritional quality of wildflower pollens for bees?

IF 1.8 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Anthony D. Vaudo, Eva Lin, Jillian A. Luthy, Anne S. Leonard, Eliza M. Grames
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Abstract

Floral traits such as color, scent, and nectar often vary substantially within plant species. However, when it comes to pollen chemistry, the scale of intraspecific variation is largely unknown, as are its potential abiotic drivers. Bees collect pollen as their primary source of protein and lipids, and interspecific variation in pollen quality influences bee foraging preferences. Understanding the scale of intraspecific spatiotemporal variation in pollen macronutrient content could further uncover the nutritional basis of many plant-pollinator interactions influenced by geographic and climatic factors. Here, we sampled pollen from 35 bee-visited wildflower species across multiple sites in Great Basin/Eastern Sierra sagebrush steppe habitat (Nevada/California, USA) and analyzed their protein and lipid concentrations. Then, using Bayesian sparse regression, we explored the relationship between 44 site-specific climate variables and variation in pollen nutritional content. In some plant species, we discovered variation in protein or lipid concentrations across sites at a scale likely meaningful to bee performance. Further, this variation was weakly but significantly related to both current season below-ground (climatic water deficit) and previous season above-ground (dewpoint) conditions, uncovering the potential for community interactions mediated by floral nutrition to be altered via multiple plant ecophysiological pathways. Identifying the causes and consequences of variation in pollen nutrition is an effort critical to understanding how climate change impacts plant fitness via interactions with pollinators as well as the health of managed and wild bees.

Abstract Image

过去和现在的非生物条件能否解释野花花粉营养质量对蜜蜂的影响?
在植物物种内部,花朵的颜色、气味和花蜜等特征往往有很大差异。然而,就花粉化学性质而言,种内变异的规模及其潜在的非生物驱动因素在很大程度上是未知的。蜜蜂采集花粉作为蛋白质和脂质的主要来源,而花粉质量的种间差异会影响蜜蜂的觅食偏好。了解花粉宏量营养素含量的种内时空变异尺度,可以进一步揭示受地理和气候因素影响的许多植物与传粉昆虫相互作用的营养基础。在此,我们在美国内华达州/加利福尼亚州的大盆地/东塞拉利昂鼠尾草干草原栖息地的多个地点采集了35种蜜蜂光顾过的野花物种的花粉样本,并分析了它们的蛋白质和脂质浓度。然后,我们利用贝叶斯稀疏回归法探讨了 44 个地点特定气候变量与花粉营养成分变化之间的关系。在某些植物物种中,我们发现不同地点的蛋白质或脂质浓度存在差异,这种差异可能对蜜蜂的表现很有意义。此外,这种变化与当季地下(气候缺水)和上一季地上(露点)条件的关系微弱但显著,揭示了由花粉营养介导的群落相互作用通过多种植物生态生理途径发生改变的可能性。确定花粉营养变化的原因和后果对于了解气候变化如何通过与传粉昆虫的相互作用影响植物的适应性以及管理和野生蜜蜂的健康至关重要。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Ecology
Evolutionary Ecology 环境科学-进化生物学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
70
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Ecology is a concept-oriented journal of biological research at the interface of ecology and evolution. We publish papers that therefore integrate both fields of research: research that seeks to explain the ecology of organisms in the context of evolution, or patterns of evolution as explained by ecological processes. The journal publishes original research and discussion concerning the evolutionary ecology of organisms. These may include papers addressing evolutionary aspects of population ecology, organismal interactions and coevolution, behaviour, life histories, communication, morphology, host-parasite interactions and disease ecology, as well as ecological aspects of genetic processes. The objective is to promote the conceptual, theoretical and empirical development of ecology and evolutionary biology; the scope extends to any organism or system. In additional to Original Research articles, we publish Review articles that survey recent developments in the field of evolutionary ecology; Ideas & Perspectives articles which present new points of view and novel hypotheses; and Comments on articles recently published in Evolutionary Ecology or elsewhere. We also welcome New Tests of Existing Ideas - testing well-established hypotheses but with broader data or more methodologically rigorous approaches; - and shorter Natural History Notes, which aim to present new observations of organismal biology in the wild that may provide inspiration for future research. As of 2018, we now also invite Methods papers, to present or review new theoretical, practical or analytical methods used in evolutionary ecology. Students & Early Career Researchers: We particularly encourage, and offer incentives for, submission of Reviews, Ideas & Perspectives, and Methods papers by students and early-career researchers (defined as being within one year of award of a PhD degree) – see Students & Early Career Researchers
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